Return To 1956 Declaration Entails No Automatic Transfer Of Kurils To Japan - Kremlin
Fahad Shabbir (@FahadShabbir) Published November 18, 2018 | 09:21 PM
KHABAROVSK (UrduPoint News / Sputnik - 18th November, 2018) The return of Russia and Japan to the 1956 joint declaration on negotiations on a peace treaty does not mean an automatic transfer of Kuril Islands to the Japanese side, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Sunday.
The leaders of Russia and Japan, Vladimir Putin and Shinzo Abe, had previously met in Singapore, reaching agreement on advancing negotiations on a peace treaty based on the 1956 Soviet-Japanese joint declaration, the only document recognized by both countries. The declaration stipulates, among other things, that Japan will regain control over Habomai islets and Shikotan in the Kuril Islands archipelago following the conclusion of the peace treaty with Russia. According to media reports, Abe promised Putin that if Habomai and Shikotan were transferred to Japan, US military bases would not be established there.
"It's difficult to negotiate without without some kind of base. Therefore, both leaders decided to take the 1956 declaration as the basis. Can we say that this means automatic transfer of some territories? Absolutely not. Actually, president Putin said that when answering journalists' questions," Peskov said.
He refuted rumors about some kind of already concluded separate deal about the transfer of the islands.
"It is not so, and it cannot be so," he assured.
According to him, the parties can reach a compromise on the issue.
"But this is a compromise that will not conflict with the national interests of any of the parties," the spokesman stressed.
The islands dispute has been souring bilateral relations for decades and serves as the main stumbling rock to signing a permanent peace treaty after the end of World War II. Both countries claim a group of four islands � Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan and Habomai � referred to as the Southern Kurils by Russia and the Northern Territories by Japan.
In 1956, the two sides signed a Joint Declaration that provided for the restoration of bilateral relations after the war and stipulated that Japan and the Soviet Union would continue to make efforts toward signing a permanent peace treaty and toward settling the island dispute. The Soviet Union also pledged to consider handing over the islands of Habomai and Shikotan to Japan. Some progress was made when Putin visited Japan in December 2016, and Moscow and Tokyo agreed to work on joint projects on the islands in the fields of seafood cultivation, tourism, agriculture, energy and hard waste disposal and facilitate movement between the Kurils and Japan.
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