Japan PM leaves for Seoul to hold summit with S. Korea, China leaders

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida left Tokyo on Sunday for a trilateral summit in Seoul with South Korea and China, as the regional security environment has become more uncertain amid the North Korean nuclear and missile threats.

At the countries' first three-way summit in more than four years, Kishida, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Chinese Premier Li Qiang are expected to agree to cooperate in tackling common challenges such as epidemics and the graying of their populations.

All eyes are on the three leaders' policies toward North Korea, which has been bolstering economic and military cooperation with China amid heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

Tokyo, Seoul and Beijing have been at odds over economic cooperation. China imposed a blanket ban on Japanese seafood imports after the release of treated radioactive wastewater from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant commenced in August 2023.

Kishida said in a recent interview with Kyodo News, "I hope to have an open discussion and agree to promote future-oriented and practical cooperation on a wide range of issues," emphasizing the importance of "a free and fair international economic order."

A Japanese government official said the leaders are likely to exchange views on how to move ahead with negotiations on a three-way free trade agreement, which stalled in early 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The countries are supposed to hold trilateral summits annually on a rotating basis, but they have occasionally been suspended as Japan's relations with its two neighbors have chilled over historical and territorial disputes.

Kishida, Yoon and Li, meanwhile, will be meeting days after China carried out two-day drills around Taiwan, which Beijing said were a "strong punishment" for those seeking the island's "independence" and a "stern warning" to "external forces" against interference and provocation.

The exercises followed last Monday's inauguration of Taiwan's new President Lai Ching-te, whom China condemns as a separatist. He is the leader of the ruling, independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party.

It is uncertain whether Yoon, Kishida and Li will raise issues related to Taiwan, the official said. Taiwan and China have been governed separately since they split as the result of a civil war in 1949. Beijing claims Taiwan is part of China's territory and an "internal affair."

The countries last held a three-way summit in December 2019 in Chengdu, southwestern China.

On the sidelines of the summit, Kishida is scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with Li and Yoon.

© Kyodo News