Mr Putin spoke of
improving relations through economic ties
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Russian President Vladimir Putin says his country is committed
to building a pipeline from Siberia to the Pacific.
Speaking in Tokyo, he said the
pipeline would bring oil supplies to the entire Asia-Pacific
region, including Japan.
Tokyo is competing with China
over the route of the pipeline, which is already in the first
stage of construction.
Mr Putin is in Japan to boost
the two nations' rapidly expanding economic ties, but little
progress is expected over a 60-year-old territorial dispute.
He later held talks with
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
"We plan to build the pipeline
to the Pacific coast with eventual supplies to the Asia-Pacific
region including Japan," Mr Putin told a meeting of Russian and
Japanese business leaders in Tokyo.
Tokyo has been lobbying for the
second stage to be constructed to the Pacific coast. Beijing
wants it to head south, to the industrial cities of northern
China.
No date has yet been set for
the second stage of construction.
"I'm confident that the
implementation of this project will significantly strengthen the
energy infrastructure of the entire region," Mr Putin said.
'Deep gulf'
Relations between Russia and
Japan have been strained by the long-running dispute over four
small islands off Japan's coast.
The islands, known as the
southern Kurils in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan,
were occupied by the Soviet Union after WWII.
Russia has said it may
surrender two of the islands, but Japan wants all four returned.
Because of the dispute, the two
countries have never signed a peace treaty to formally end the
war.
Ahead of Mr Putin's visit, Mr
Koizumi admitted there was a "deep gulf" over the issue, and
warned an agreement was unlikely to be reached in his talks with
the Russian leader.
Mr Putin has also warned that
he would not discuss giving up control of the islands.
But he told the meeting that
stronger economic relations between the two countries would
improve their overall ties.
"I'm confident that building
stable, pragmatic long-term economic ties is being supported by
politicians' efforts to build a constructive partnership," he
said.
"This dialogue will contribute
to more openness and confidence between our business
communities."
During Mr Putin's three-day
visit, the Japanese government is expected to sign an agreement
endorsing Russia's bid to join the World Trade Organisation.
For its part Moscow has made
sympathetic noises about Japan's own ambitions to become a
permanent member of the UN Security Council.
RUSSIA'S EASTERN
PIPELINE CHOICE
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