Russian president says he wants to tackle ‘anachronism’ of Kuril islands territorial dispute in summit with prime minister Shinzo Abe

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Russia and Japan kick off a summit on Thursday aimed at reaching a deal over a group of small islands that have prevented the countries from formally ending their second world war hostilities.



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Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, will host the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, in the former’s ancestral city of Nagato in hopes of achieving a breakthrough over the territory off Japan’s northern coast seized by Soviet troops in 1945.

The four islands are known as the Southern Kurils in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan, and the dispute has been a thorn in relations for more than seven decades.

Abe would like to seal a deal as soon as possible as Japanese former residents are ageing and dwindling in number.

Despite months of preparation the outlook is not good, with both sides recently damping down expectations of major progress.

“I want to go into this summit with determination to end the issue in my generation,” Abe told former residents earlier this week, suggesting an agreement remains distant.

Putin, a judo fan who is making his first visit to Japan in over a decade, said he wanted to end the “anachronism” of the two countries not having a second world war peace treaty. “But how to do this is a difficult question,” he told Japanese media.

For Abe the issue is also a legacy from his late father, Shintaro, who took the lead in negotiations with Moscow as a foreign minister but died in 1991 after pushing for talks.

The summit in western Japan is the latest attempt to draw a line under the second world war since Japan and the Soviet Union began discussions in 1956.

In Nagato, Abe and Putin are expected to focus on territorial and peace treaty issues, a Japanese foreign ministry official said.

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The two leaders will then move to Tokyo on Friday for more talks and a joint press appearance before attending an economic forum.

Abe has looked to eke out concessions by dangling the prospect of major Japanese investment in front of Moscow, which is mired in economic crisis.

But few believe Putin is likely to cave to Japanese demands to hand back at least some control over the islands, especially after Donald Trump’s election as president of the United States last month.

The New York real-estate baron has vowed to improve ties with Russia, where the economy has reeled under US sanctions against Moscow over Ukraine and the impact of falling oil prices.