
Memorial services at sea to be held off disputed islands
In Japan, the four islands, which were seized by the former Soviet Union from Japan in the closing days of World War II, are collectively called the Northern Territories.
Held for the fourth consecutive year, the memorial services aboard a ship reflect the wishes of former residents and successors to offer condolences to their ancestors as close as possible to their homeland, at a time when exchange initiatives, including a visa-free visit program, have been halted amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The Hokkaido government said Tuesday that it will run the memorial services jointly with a league of former residents and others.
Five of the scheduled seven memorial service sessions will be one-day trips in which participants will mourn their ancestors as they face the Habomai group of islets and the southern part of Kunashiri Island, both in the group of claimed islands, aboard a ship named Etopirika that will depart from and return to the port of Nemuro in eastern Hokkaido. The other two will involve an overnight stay on board, with participants offering prayers toward the northern part of Kunashiri Island.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
41 minutes ago
- NHK
Ishiba, Belize PM agree to strengthen rule-based international order
Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru met with the visiting Belize Prime Minister John Briceno in Tokyo on Monday. Briceno is visiting Japan for the World Expo in Osaka, among other things. Belize is a country that has diplomatic relations with Taiwan. The two prime ministers agreed to work together to help maintain and strengthen the world order based on the rule of law. They also agreed to develop relations in wide-ranging fields including economic cooperation and exchange programs. At a joint news conference, Ishiba said Japan and Belize are important partners that share values and principles. He said it is encouraging to see closer cooperation between the two nations at a time when the free and open international order based on the rule of law is being challenged.


Asahi Shimbun
an hour ago
- Asahi Shimbun
Documents show secret pact if U.S. troops sent to Korea conflict
A copy of a cable sent in November 1959 regarding the revision of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty (Provided by Takashi Nobuo) Declassified U.S. documents show that Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi agreed in the late 1950s to allow the United States to deploy its forces based in Japan in the event of a contingency on the Korean Peninsula without consulting Tokyo. The documents were U.S. diplomatic cables sent between 1958 and 1960 regarding negotiations for the revision of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty between Foreign Minister Aiichiro Fujiyama and U.S. Ambassador to Japan Douglas MacArthur II. After becoming prime minister in 1957, Kishi called for a more equal relationship with the United States and in revising the security treaty he wanted a prior consultation before U.S. troops based in Japan that could be deployed for missions other than the defense of Japan. But in July 1959, MacArthur made it clear that the United States could not have a prior consultation with Japan if troops had to be sent immediately in support of U.N. troops if the Korean War resumed. Kishi faced a dilemma because if Washington was allowed to send troops to the Korean Peninsula without prior notification, it would demonstrate that the two nations were far from the equal status that Kishi argued for. The Asahi Shimbun was shown copies of the documents found by Takashi Shinobu, a professor emeritus at Nihon University in Tokyo and an expert on the history of Japan-U.S. diplomacy, at the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. A document from August 1959 had Fujiyama explaining that he "had very carefully considered' the matter with Kishi. Fujiyama proposed that a military conflict on the Korean Peninsula be made the sole exception to the prior consultation system under the revised security treaty. Fujiyama pointed out that the notification system would be the most important characteristic that showed the revised security treaty placed the two nations on a more equal footing. But as negotiations were continuing between Fujiyama and MacArthur, protests broke out in Japan by those who opposed a revision of the security treaty on the grounds it would drag Japan into an American war. The documents show that in November 1959, Kishi met with MacArthur and expressed fear that the treaty itself would be threatened and his own administration would fall if the issue was handled in the wrong manner. Kishi had Fujiyama propose an agreement between the two sides on the Korean Peninsula deployment issue in the form of confidential minutes for the first meeting of the security consultative body under the revised security treaty. Fujiyama and MacArthur reached such an agreement prior to the January 1960 visit by Kishi to the United States to sign the revised security treaty. The existence of the secret pact came to light after the then Democratic Party of Japan took control of the government in 2009. A panel of experts determined the agreement on no prior consultation for the deploying of U.S. troops to the Korean Peninsula was the only secret pact clearly agreed to by the two sides. But although a draft of that pact was uncovered, few documents related to the negotiations that led to that agreement were found in the Foreign Ministry archives. Nobuo said the lack of documents on the Japanese side was a reflection of the inward-looking stance of Japanese diplomacy that relied on secret pacts to protect the government of that time.


Japan Times
an hour ago
- Japan Times
U.S. envoy to attend peace ceremonies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki
U.S. Ambassador to Japan George Glass will attend this year's peace ceremonies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki to mark the 80th anniversaries of the 1945 U.S. atomic bombings, the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo said Monday. The United States didn't send its ambassador to Japan to the annual ceremony in Nagasaki last year, over the city's decision not to invite Israel. "In such a significant year of reflection and remembrance, I am honored to represent the United States at the peace memorial ceremonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki," Glass said in a statement. The United States dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, and another on Nagasaki three days later, in the closing days of World War II. Last year, the six Group of Seven major democracies excluding Japan didn't send their ambassadors to the peace ceremony in Nagasaki, saying the city's decision not to invite Israel due to its fighting in the Palestinian territory of Gaza meant that Israel was treated in the same way as Russia and Belarus, which were not invited following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, and could be misleading. This year, Nagasaki has invited Israel and Russia, which hadn't been on the guest list to the annual ceremony since 2022. Both countries are expected to be represented by their ambassadors to Japan at Saturday's event. It will be Glass's first visit to Hiroshima and Nagasaki since he assumed his current post in April. "The people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and their message of peace and hope are an enduring reminder of the power of reconciliation," Glass said in the statement.