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395018
Tue, 01/26/2016 - 12:40
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Peace treaty with Japan not synonymous with solving territorial issue - Lavrov

MOSCOW, January 26. /TASS/. Moscow considers that signing a peace treaty with Tokyo is not synonymous with solving the long-running territorial dispute, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said at the annual press conference on Tuesday. "We do not consider that the peace treaty is synonymous with solving the territorial problem. This is a step that is needed for the relations between the two countries to be normal not only in fact but also in legal implementation," Lavrov said. Lavrov also said the Russian president and Japan’s prime minister have agreed that the peace treaty should be necessarily among those issues that are due to be solved. "We are interested in the closest and warmest relations with Japan, this is our important neighbor with which we have a broad network of trade and economic, humanitarian and cultural ties and many plans," Lavrov said. Japan’s companies actively work on Russia’s market in the sphere of developing and processing hydrocarbons, car manufacturing and other high-technology spheres. "We want these projects to multiply in the interests of two countries and our nations." Lavrov reminded that the only document that was signed and ratified by the two countries in 1956 was the so-called declaration that says that a peace treaty should be signed. The document also says that then the Soviet Union could possibly hand over these two southern islands as a "gesture of good will." "This declaration first of all proceeded from the main thesis - it confirmed that the Soviet Union and Japan recognized the results of World War II," he said, adding that it is impossible to move forward without confirming this position. The long-running dispute over the Southern Kuril Islands remains the main obstacle for the settlement in the relations between Russia and Japan and signing of the peace treaty. After the end of World War II, all the Kuril Islands were declared the territory of the Soviet Union. Japan claims Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan and Khabomai as part of its territory. Read more

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