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Japan PM may visit N Korea in kidnap probe

Published: 03 Jun 2014 - 11:08 pm | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 04:56 am

TOKYO:  Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe may make a rare visit to North Korea, his foreign minister said yesterday, days after announcing a deal to re-open the probe into Japanese citizens kidnapped by spies in the Cold War years.
Any such visit would be controversial, especially in Seoul and Washington, which have led the charge to further isolate Pyongyang over its ballistic missile and nuclear programmes.
Only Junichiro Koizumi has ever visited the secretive state as a Japanese prime minister, in 2002 and 2004, in a futile effort to normalise bilateral ties.
Tokyo and Pyongyang have no formal diplomatic ties, partially because of what Japan says is the North’s unwillingness to come clean over the abductions in the 1970s and 1980s.
But in a breakthrough last week, they said an investigation into the fate of missing Japanese would be re-opened. In exchange, Japan would ease some of the unilateral sanctions it has imposed on the isolated state.
“We must think constantly what would be the most effective response and method in order to bring results,” Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told a parliamentary committee.
“In doing so, we will consider (Abe) making a visit to North Korea,” he said.
Kishida noted that the government needed to act swiftly as families of kidnap victims are increasingly elderly.
AFP