ID :
82364
Wed, 09/30/2009 - 11:10
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/82364
The shortlink copeid
Hatoyama vows efforts to get back abduction victims+
TOKYO, Sept. 29 Kyodo -
Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama vowed Tuesday to make efforts to have Japanese
citizens who were abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s and are
believed to be still living in the reclusive state returned to Japan, according
to relatives of the abduction victims who visited the new Japanese leader at
his office.
''I am going to tackle this issue in the belief that a new administration will
be meaningless if we don't solve this,'' Hatoyama was quoted by the relatives
as telling them in their first meeting since he took office on Sept. 16.
''It is not that easy, but in order for a new administration to demonstrate a
politics in which each and every life is cherished, progress must be seen in
the abduction issue,'' Hatoyama told reporters in the evening, referring to the
basis of his philosophy, ''fraternity.''
''This is the issue we must tackle,'' he said.
The relatives said Hatoyama also notified them that he had sought support on
the abduction issue from U.S. President Barack Obama and other foreign leaders
when he held bilateral talks with them during his six-day trip to the United
States last week.
The 62-year-old Hatoyama, who heads the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, also
informed the relatives that Obama promised him the United States will do
everything it can do to help get the abduction victims back, according to
Shigeo Iizuka, the brother of abduction victim Yaeko Taguchi.
But the prime minister also underlined the importance of Japan committing
itself more strongly on the issue, according to Iizuka.
''I told him I'm delighted to feel eagerness'' of the new government to address
the problem, said Iizuka, who chairs the Association of the Families of Victims
Kidnapped by North Korea.
Hatoyama also told Iizuka his administration will work hard in cooperation with
the South Korean government to invite to Japan former North Korean agent Kim
Hyon Hui, who knew Taguchi as a Japanese-language teacher in North Korea and
currently lives in the South.
In March, Iizuka and Taguchi's son Koichiro Iizuka met Kim, who was convicted
of the 1987 fatal bombing of a South Korean airliner but was freed in 1990
under a presidential pardon, and were able to get a glimpse into how Taguchi
spent her life in North Korea.
But Sakie Yokota, mother of abduction victim Megumi Yokota, was less sanguine.
''I don't remember how many times I have come here (the prime minister's
office) and how many times I have begged the prime minister for help,'' she
said.
''I have always trusted them (politicians) and expected them to do their
best,'' she said. ''I will thank them only when we see actual results.''
Pyongyang says Megumi died in North Korea, but her family does not accept the
claim.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano, who was also at the meeting, said at a
press conference, ''The Hatoyama Cabinet will do its utmost to resolve the
abduction issue as the responsibility of the state.''
North Korea promised to set up a panel to reinvestigate the fates of Japanese
abductees during bilateral negotiations with Japan in August last year, but no
progress has been made on the probe.
Japan has said that at least 17 Japanese were abducted to North Korea in the
late 1970s and early 1980s. The issue is an emotional one in Japan and has been
a major obstacle to the normalization of bilateral ties.
==Kyodo