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  South Korea rules out bilateral summit with Japan at December forum   (AP)  Updated: 2005-11-30 16:13  
 South Korea has no plans to hold a bilateral summit with Japan on the 
sidelines of a meeting of Asian leaders in December, its foreign minister said 
Wednesday amid a lingering row over allegations that Tokyo is glossing over its 
imperialist and wartime past. 
 South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro 
Koizumi plan to attend a summit of Asian nations scheduled for mid-December in 
Malaysia. 
 "At present, we haven't considered holding a (bilateral) meeting between 
President Roh and Prime Minister Koizumi," Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon told his 
weekly press briefing. 
 Relations between Seoul and Tokyo have seriously frayed in a series of 
disputes this year, including over Japanese school history textbooks critics say 
minimize the country's wartime atrocities and a visit by Koizumi to a shrine 
honoring Japan's war dead, including convicted war criminals. 
 South Korea, a colony of Japan from 1910-45, regards such moves as a sign 
that Japan hasn't truly repented for its wartime past, despite numerous 
apologies by its leaders. 
 After Koizumi's visit to Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine last month, Seoul threatened 
to suspend high-level diplomatic exchanges in protest. 
 But Ban went ahead with a scheduled trip to Tokyo and Roh also met one-on-one 
with Koizumi on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum 
summit held in the South Korean city of Busan earlier this month. 
 Seoul officials described the meetings as part of "indispensable diplomatic 
activities" that should continue despite the row. 
 Last week, Japan angered South Korea again when its foreign minister, Taro 
Aso, said that only South Korea and China complain about Koizumi's shrine 
visits. Seoul expressed strong regret. 
 Although a summit is unlikely, Ban said he expects to meet Aso at next 
month's 13-nation gathering that includes the 10 member countries of the 
Association of Southeast Asian Nations _ or ASEAN _ as well as South Korea, 
China and Japan. 
 That forum _ called the ASEAN+3 summit _ will be followed by the inaugural 
meeting of the East Asia Summit, which also will include India, Australia and 
New Zealand. 
 "I'm going to use spontaneous opportunities ... to exchange views with 
Foreign Minister Aso on his perception of history and to deliver the position of 
our government," Ban said. "I'm thinking of telling (Aso) that he, as foreign 
minister, should take a more cautious attitude and that would be helpful to 
resolving various pending issues amicably." 
 Two years ago, Aso infuriated South Koreans with remarks that Koreans 
voluntarily assumed Japanese names under colonial rule. 
 Negative views of Aso worsened following allegations Tuesday that his family 
ran a coal mining company that used more than 10,000 Korean forced laborers 
during the colonial era. 
 South Korea and Japan held talks Tuesday on locating and repatriating the 
remains of Korean forced laborers who died in Japan. 
 Lee Jae-chul, spokesman for a government commission examining the issue of 
forced labor under Japan's colonial rule, said South Korea also asked Japan to 
look for data related to the Aso family firm's use of Korean workers and if it 
had kept any Korean remains. 
 Japan denied South Korea made such a specific request. 
 The Japanese foreign minister headed Aso Cement from 1973-1979, according to 
the Foreign Ministry web site. 
 Officials at Aso Corp., the parent company of Aso Cement, were not 
immediately available for comment.  
  
  
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