Japan foreign minister meets China envoy to mend frosty ties

Japan’s foreign minister and the Chinese envoy to Japan met on Friday in a rare courtesy call described as “friendly”, with the two Asian giants looking to mend frosty ties.
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, whose department has repeatedly summoned Ambassador Cheng Yonghua in recent months, declined to detail what the two discussed beyond saying they had “meaningful exchanges” based on their “mutually beneficial relationship”.
The meeting came as long tumultuous Tokyo-Beijing relations plummet to new lows over ownership of islands in the East China Sea, as both countries ramp up their armed forces.
I feel that we were able to have meaningful exchanges. I think the atmosphere was very friendly
China has sent ships and aircraft into the area on scores of occasions, prompting counter deployments by Japan.
The spat has hammered trade relations, prompting Japanese business leaders to press Tokyo to improve relations with its top trading partner.
China’s unilateral declaration last month of an Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ) that includes disputed territory drew protest from Tokyo, as well as from the United States and South Korea.
Japan’s conservative Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has not held direct talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping since sweeping elections late last year.