Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visits 
to a Tokyo shrine which memorializes war criminals, may impede the country's 
efforts to win a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council, said 
Secretary- General Kofi Annan. 
Koizumi's policy of visiting Yasukuni shrine annually "hasn't helped" Japan's 
chances, Annan said at a news conference in Tokyo. "I don't think this is only 
limited to the Council issue. It has raised some tensions in the region to which 
I think we need to make some gestures to put behind us." 
 
 
   U.N. Secretary General 
 Kofi Annan (L) shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi 
 as he is presented with a framed picture of a Japanese commemorative stamp 
 marking the 50th years of Japan's association to the United Nations during 
 their meeting at the prime minister's official residence in Tokyo, May 17, 
 2006. Annan flew from Seoul on Tuesday as part of his Asia tour. 
 [Reuters] | 
The visits to the shrine have prompted outrage from China and South Korea, 
who view Yasukuni as a symbol of Japan's military occupation of Asia 60 years 
ago. There are 14 Class A war criminals enshrined among the more than 2 million 
dead commemorated. 
Japan, Germany, India and Brazil are seeking permanent seats on the UN's most 
powerful panel. The 15-member Security Council, including the five permanent 
members -- the US, China, Russia, the UK and France -- was established at the 
end of World War II and has the power to order economic sanctions or military 
action against nations deemed aggressors. 
'Stupid' Strategy 
Koizumi's UN strategy "is really stupid," said Koichi Nakano, professor of 
political science at Sophia University in Tokyo. The Prime Minister "goes to 
Yasukuni while saying we also want a seat on the Security Council. That's not 
going to work." 
Last week, Japan's biggest executive lobby group urged Koizumi to stop 
visiting Yasukuni to improve relations with China. 
China and South Korea canceled planned summits after the most recent of 
Koizumi's five visits as prime minister on October 17. Koizumi, who became prime 
minister in 2001, says the purpose of the visits is to mourn the country's war 
dead and to pledge Japan will never again wage a war of aggression. 
The arguments over Japan's wartime past have impeded progress in other talks 
between Japan and China, such as resolving a dispute over gas drilling rights in 
the seas between the countries. Japan needs to resolve the issue before 
relations can be restored to normal, China's government has said. 
South Korea and Japan are also arguing over the ownership of islands that lie 
between the two countries that have been controlled by South Korea for the past 
five decades. 
New Textbooks 
Japan's neighbors also objected to the education ministry's approval of new 
school textbooks last April that they say gloss over Japanese wartime 
atrocities. The textbooks sparked three weekends of violent protests in Beijing 
and other Chinese cities with protesters attacking Japanese stores, restaurants 
and other businesses. Japan and China are Asia's biggest trading partners. 
"The countries in the region know each other well and they have been 
observing each other and they share a certain history," said Annan. "They are 
all aware of what irritates, worries, or provokes the other side and they will 
have to assess the situation for themselves and determine what changes one has 
to make to smooth relationships."