TOKYO (Reuters) - A group of South Korean lawmakers landed on an islet disputed with Japan in the East China Sea on Monday, prompting a protest from Tokyo and straining ties at a time when stalled talks over North Korea’s nuclear program call for close coordination.

Tokyo and Seoul have long been at loggerheads over the sovereignty of a group of islets called Takeshima in Japanese and Dokdo in Korean, which lie about halfway between the East Asian neighbors in the Sea of Japan, which Seoul refers to as the East Sea.

“This landing on Takeshima by a group of South Korean lawmakers was carried out despite Japan’s advance protests and

requests to call it off,” Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a regular news conference.

“In light of our country’s stance on sovereignty over Takeshima, this is by no means acceptable.”

It was the lawmakers’ second visit to the islands since August 2016, media said.

The two countries share a bitter history that includes Japan’s 1910-45 colonization of the Korean peninsula and the issue of “comfort women”, a Japanese euphemism for South Korean women forced to work in Japanese military brothels in World War Two.

South Korea last week shut down a Japan-funded foundation created under a 2015 deal between the Asian neighbors to settle compensation for the women.

South Korea vowed to pursue a more “victim-oriented” approach, but the move prompted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to warn South Korea that it was risking damaging ties by disbanding the fund.

South Korea’s top court also ruled last month that Japan’s Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp must compensate four South Koreans for their forced labor during the war, a verdict Japan denounced as “unthinkable”.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump pledged to work towards denuclearization at their landmark June summit in Singapore, but the agreement was short on specifics and negotiations have made little headway since.