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Japanese envoy to visit China ahead of possible summit: reports
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 12, 2015


Political sweetener: Japan PM Abe to get branded honey
Tokyo (AFP) July 13, 2015 - Step aside Abe-nomics, the Shinzo Abe brandwagon is rolling on... into honey, after the Japanese prime minister's wife decided to establish a beehive at their official residence.

First lady Akie Abe wants hives enough for up to 10,000 Japanese honeybees, right in the centre of Tokyo, and intends to harvest "Abe-brand" honey later this year, reports and an NGO said.

Mrs Abe, who frequently speaks out on environmental and social issues, apparently took her inspiration on apiculture from her American opposite number, Michelle Obama, who has bees at the White House.

The Ginza Honey Bee Project, a non-profit organisation that keeps honey bees in the Japanese capital, told AFP they will offer a helping hand to Mrs Abe in how she should care for her stripey charges.

The Abes visited Washington in April this year, where the two first ladies compared notes on the global decline in the number of bees.

Bees are vital to the life-cycle of many plants, including a lot of crops grown for human consumption, because of their role in pollination.

But increasing use of pesticides has killed a large number of the insects, and some scientists warn of impending disaster that could even cause food shortages.

After returning from Washington, Mrs Abe got in touch with the Ginza Honey Bee Project.

"I'm impressed honey can be harvested in the centre of Tokyo," she wrote on her Facebook page in May.

"The environment where bees can live is an environment where humans can live safely. I want Japanese bees to come back."

Mrs Abe intends to fill the hive with up to 10,000 Japanese honeybees, possibly as early as this month, Jiji Press said.

"If things go smoothly, 'Abe-brand' honey is expected to be harvested in the autumn," the agency reported.

Japan's top security diplomat could visit China as early as this week ahead of a possible visit by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to repair strained ties between the neighbours, local media said Sunday.

Shotaro Yachi, the head of the National Security Council, plans to visit Beijing for talks with Yang Jiechi, China's top diplomat who serves as state councillor, Japan's public broadcaster NHK and other media reported.

Yachi is expected to lay the groundwork for a summit between Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping, following their meeting in April in Jakarta on the sidelines of international conferences, they said.

Abe is considering travelling to China around the time of a September 3 ceremony in Beijing to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, the Nikkei daily and the Mainichi Shimbun said.

Ties between Beijing and Tokyo have warmed over the past year, but strains over territorial disputes and attitudes towards wartime history continue to divide Asia's top economies.

China officially invited to Abe to attend the event marking Beijing's victory in what it calls the war of resistance against Japanese aggression, but it has yet to receive a response, Kyodo News reported.

The visit could be imperilled if Abe makes any divisive comments in a statement on the war anniversary, Japanese media said.

Abe's language in the planned statement is being closely watched by China and South Korea, who suspect him of being a historical revisionist bent on re-forging global opinion of Japan's warring.

Beijing and Seoul vociferously argue that Tokyo has not properly atoned for its actions in the 1930s and 1940s and does not fully accept its guilt.

Abe has said he may not issue a direct apology for Japan's past aggression as he wants Japan to have what he calls a less masochistic view of its history.


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