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Viewing cable 07TOKYO3768, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/14/07

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO3768 2007-08-15 08:26 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO0656
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #3768/01 2270826
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 150826Z AUG 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6502
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RUALSFJ/COMUSJAPAN YOKOTA AB JA//J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/CTF 72
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 5001
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 2577
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 6190
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 1602
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 3339
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 8398
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 4463
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 5426
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 TOKYO 003768 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA; 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/14/07 
 
 
Index: 
 
(1) State Minister in Charge of Okinawa Takaichi, Former Prime 
Minister Koizumi make visits to Yasukuni Shrine 
 
(2) Anniversary of the end of the war: Lower House Chairman Kono 
seems to make critical statements about Abe in commemorative 
ceremony speech 
 
(3) Studies of DPJ: Ozawa's influence seen in policy decision-making 
process; DPJ focuses on linking up with other opposition parties 
 
(4) Interview with DPJ Deputy President Naoto Kan: We will win in 
policy-making and in politics 
 
(5) Defense Ministry, NPA at odds over appointment of new vice 
defense minister 
 
(6) Peace for Japanese-Americans: Comfort women resolution shakes 
their self-identity 
 
(7) Japan's effort to provide aid to Africa bogs down (part 1): 
European countries, the US increase aid; China increasing presence 
through resource diplomacy 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1) State Minister in Charge of Okinawa Takaichi, Former Prime 
Minister Koizumi make visits to Yasukuni Shrine 
 
ASAHI ONLINE (Abridged) 
August 15, 2007 13:48 pm 
 
Since this morning, Diet members have flocked to Yasukuni Shrine, 
making visits alone and in groups. Prime Minister Abe has maintained 
his ambiguous stance about visiting Yasukuni Shrine, refusing to say 
explicitly what he has decided. However, State Minister in Charge of 
Okinawa Takaichi paid a visit to the shrine at around 1:30 pm this 
afternoon. However, it seems that the other cabinet members will 
forgo visits to the shrine, meaning that the number of cabinet 
members who visited the shrine will be the fewest since 1985, when 
the official visits of then Prime Minister Nakasone's cabinet 
created a controversy. Meanwhile, former Prime Minister Koizumi paid 
a visit to Yasukuni Shrine at around 8:20 this morning. 
 
Each year since 1985, anywhere from a handful to over a dozen 
cabinet members have visited Yasukuni Shrine on August 15, the 
anniversary of the end of the war, but this year, all cabinet 
members had stated that they had no particular plans to visit the 
shrine, indirectly hinting that they would forgo a visit. At a press 
conference on August 10, Takaichi stated: "I have no fixation (on 
making a visit) on the 15th. Going on that day may be a little 
difficult." Even at a press conference this morning, she said: "It 
is not a situation where I can quietly pray at the shrine." Yet 
according to those around her, right after making this statement, 
Takaichi "saw no security problems" and added a visit to Yasukuni 
into her afternoon schedule. 
 
Koizumi arrived at Yasukuni by car and paid a visit to the shrine in 
a morning coat. According to a shrine official, he wrote down his 
personal name "Junichiro Koizumi" without using his title and paid 
for a floral tribute with his personal funds. Regarding the amount 
 
TOKYO 00003768  002 OF 008 
 
 
he paid for the floral tribute and the way in which he prayed at the 
shrine, the shrine official refused to comment saying: "We do not 
discuss the shrine visits of individuals." 
 
This is the second year in a row that Koizumi has chosen to visit 
the shrine on the anniversary of the end of the war. After visiting 
the shrine, Koizumi didn't take any questions from the press and 
left the shrine without saying a word. 
 
Makoto Koga, former Liberal Democratic Party Secretary-General and 
head of Nihon Izokukai (an association for bereaved families of that 
nation's war dead), also made a visit to Yasukuni Shrine this 
morning, but he did not go all the way inside. In a statement to the 
press, Koga said: "I visit the shrine every year on August 15. I 
paid memorial tribute to the spirits of all the war dead, not just 
my father (who died fighting in the war)." 
 
(2) Anniversary of the end of the war: Lower House Chairman Kono 
seems to make critical statements about Abe in commemorative 
ceremony speech 
 
MAINICHI ONLINE 
August 15, 2007 12:51 pm 
 
In a speech today at a ceremony to commemorate the nation's war 
dead, Lower House Chairman Yohei Kono offered his opinion that "thus 
far, (the people of Japan) have chosen the new regime, as symbolized 
by our Constitution, which contains a self-imposed restriction on 
the use of force abroad." In this statement, Kono appears to have 
Prime Minister Abe's mantra of "breaking with the postwar regime" in 
mind, and his words could be taken as a criticism of the prime 
minister - an unusual occurrence at a commemorative event. 
 
Chairman Kono went on to say: "Keeping in our hearts the principles 
of the Constitution, which announces that we have given up war as a 
means of solving international conflict, we look towards realizing a 
world without war, a world without nuclear weapons, a world that 
operates not through revenge and intimidation, but rather through 
international cooperation." This statement emphasizes his support 
for the current Constitution. 
 
Kono also touched on the comfort women issue, saying: "I offer my 
deepest apologies to those who suffered human-rights abuses, to 
those who suffered deep emotional wounds and continue to suffer to 
this day because of the inhumane actions of a part of the Japanese 
military." In 1993, Kono, who was then chief cabinet secretary, 
released a statement acknowledging the involvement of the Imperial 
Japanese Army and offered an apology. However, there are some 
lawmakers now calling for a review of the Kono Statement, citing a 
lack of evidence that the military coerced women into becoming 
sexual slaves. Kono's words today may be a way of trying to contain 
such moves. 
 
(3) Studies of DPJ: Ozawa's influence seen in policy decision-making 
process; DPJ focuses on linking up with other opposition parties 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
August 15, 2007 
 
With his party's victory in the July House of Councillors election, 
Minshuto (DPJ or Democratic Party of Japan) President Ichiro Ozawa's 
political presence has strengthened even more in the party. Ozawa 
 
TOKYO 00003768  003 OF 008 
 
 
said ahead of the election that he would retire from politics if the 
opposition failed to trade places with the ruling camp in the upper 
chamber. He now aims at totally grabbing the reins of government. He 
will be certain to place emphasis on "political maneuvering" and 
"joint efforts by opposition parties." Junior and mid-level 
lawmakers in the party, however, are concerned that the party will 
lose its style of policy-making through wide-ranging discussions. 
How far will Ozawa be able to extend his influence over the DPJ? 
 
In the extraordinary Diet session, which ended on Aug. 10, the Upper 
House was supposed to wrap up its session with such minimum 
parliamentary proceedings as deciding on the seating arrangements 
and electing its president. However there was an unexpected event 
when the DPJ, Social Democratic Party (SDP), and People's New Party 
jointly submitted to the chamber a bill freezing by one year the 
postal-privatization program. Behind this lay Ozawa's strategy 
toward the Upper House. 
 
The DPJ aims to form a joint parliamentary group. The party is 10 
seats short of a majority in the Upper House. It will first need to 
win cooperation from the People's New Party, which has similar 
policies to it, in order to ensure the passage of bills the party 
will submit in the future. 
 
On Aug. 7, Ozawa directed Secretary General Yukio Hatoyama and other 
officials to submit the bill. Kensei Hasegawa of the People's New 
Party briefed the bill to a DPJ meeting that started at 9:00 a.m. on 
Aug. 8. The party decided in a meeting of the "Next Cabinet" at 3:00 
p.m. to entrust Policy Research Council Chairman Takeaki Matsumoto 
with the matter. The internal procedure on the bill, which was 
unexpected, was completed in just half a day. 
 
In the DPJ, most policies used to be approved by the "Next Cabinet," 
in which Ozawa serves as "prime minister," after going through 
discussions at 13 "division panels," corresponding to such standing 
Diet committees as finance and internal affairs committees. 
 
At last year's extra Diet session, the conservative group won 
"approval" in a meeting of the foreign and defense section of a bill 
upgrading the Defense Agency to the status of a ministry, views on 
which were divided in the party. As a result, the group was able to 
win the approval of Ozawa, who had opposed the bill. 
 
Ozawa has let Upper House Chairman Azuma Koshiishi join meetings of 
his triumvirate that includes Hatoyama and Deputy President Naoto 
Kan, as well. This is because close cooperation will be 
indispensable more than ever. The DPJ intends to submit about 10 
bills in the fall to the extra Diet session. 
 
"Are you speaking it on behalf of the president?" Koshiishi warned 
in a meeting on Aug. 2 against Kan, who was going around 
broadcasting the strategy of submitting bills first to the Upper 
House. 
 
There are many lawmakers, who came from labor unions, in the Upper 
House. Conservative lawmakers are alert to the possibility that the 
party won't be able to ignore views of Rengo (Japan Trade Unions 
Confederation), which made a significant contribution to the party 
in the Upper House race. 
 
It remains to be seen how the three elements --"Ozawa's directions," 
the "Upper House's individuality," and "labor unions" -- will be 
 
TOKYO 00003768  004 OF 008 
 
 
intertwined. 
 
(4) Interview with DPJ Deputy President Naoto Kan: We will win in 
policy-making and in politics 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
August 15, 2007 
 
-- During the "financial Diet session" held in 1998 (TN: the 
"financial Diet session" commonly refers to the 79-day extra Diet 
session held to deal with the a banking crisis and to split the 
Finance Ministry, separating its fiscal and financial into separate 
government agencies), when you were president (of the Democratic 
Party of Japan), the opposition parties successfully convinced the 
ruling party, which at the time had lost its majority in the Upper 
House, to accept all their demands. 
 
"The government proposed a "bridge bank" bill, under which a public 
banking entity would take over operations, such as money lending, 
from a private banking institution that went bankrupt. However, even 
those in charge of practical affairs in the Liberal Democratic Party 
recognized that the proposal of the opposition parties to 
temporarily nationalize banks that had collapsed was better 
developed (than the LDP's proposal). 
 
It was difficult to get then Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi to 
cooperate, as he said: 'When a government proposal is scrapped, 
people question the leadership of the administration.' He finally 
agreed when we clearly stated: 'Even if you support our (the 
opposition's) proposal, we will not make a political issue out of 
it.'" 
 
-- However, "not making a political issue" (out of the financial 
proposals) caused a crack to open in the coalition of the opposition 
parties. 
 
"While the LDP was negotiating with the opposition parties (over 
these proposals), it was also starting to make moves beneath the 
surface to form a coalition with the New Komeito. We were defeated 
by the LDP's vicious method of convincing a chunk of the opposition 
to join its side and were thus unable to topple the administration. 
This time, we must win in the arenas of politics and policy." 
 
-- Is the alliance of the opposition parties solid? 
 
"In the Upper House, the DPJ has obtained the post of president, 
chairing positions in committees and also has a stable majority. The 
coalition with the Social Democratic Party, the People's New Party 
and New Party Nippon is also strong, and we hope to communicate 
separately with the Japanese Communist Party. There may be moves by 
the LDP to absorb members of the opposition parties, but the 
difference in numbers between the ruling and the opposition parties 
(in the Upper House) is very large, meaning that the outcome will 
not be the same as it was in 1998." 
 
-- Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is seeking the cooperation of the 
opposition parties in order to extend the Anti-Terrorism Special 
Measures Law, which is set to expire on November 1. 
 
"We will not respond to his requests for us to join his side of the 
wrestling ring. Our basic objective is to form a government that is 
not the current one. We must carefully maintain our oppositional 
 
TOKYO 00003768  005 OF 008 
 
 
axis. We will not fall for the LDP's political trick of trying to 
attract members of the opposition parties and obfuscate the issues. 
We won't be tricked by the LDP's political plots." 
 
(5) Defense Ministry, NPA at odds over appointment of new vice 
defense minister 
 
SANKEI (Page 3) (Full) 
August 15, 2007 
 
Defense Minister Yuriko Koike met Administrative Vice Defense 
Minister Takemasa Moriya at the Defense Ministry yesterday to 
discuss her idea of replacing him. But the meeting ended 
inconclusively. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who met with Koike on the 
13th to discuss the replacement issue, intends to replace Moriya 
with the Defense Ministry's Secretariat Director General Tetsuya 
Nishikawa, who previously worked for the National Police Agency 
(NPA), timed after he reshuffles his cabinet on Aug. 27. Moriya, 
though, has been strongly opposed to the appointment of Nishikawa as 
his successor, worried about a strengthening of NPA's authority. 
 
In the meeting with Moriya, Koike insisted on appointing Nishikawa 
vice minister. Quoting Abe as saying to reporters: "Nothing has been 
decided on the appointment of a new vice minister," Moriya urged 
Koike to coordinate views with Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa 
Shiozaki. But Koike reportedly showed her displeasure, remarking: "I 
do not want to meet him on this matter again." Afterward, Koike told 
reporters: "We are making efforts to defend Japan, and not to defend 
ourselves." 
 
The Defense Ministry and the Self-Defense Force have been criticized 
for their loose handling of defense secrets, as represented by the 
leaking of classified information on the Aegis system. By bringing 
in Nishikawa - a specialist in the information-security area, Koike 
reportedly is aiming to reform the ministry's lax nature. 
 
In reaction, Moriya considers that the appointment of Nishikawa as 
vice minister could lead to strengthening the NPA's authority in the 
ministry. One Defense Ministry source also commented: "The NPA is 
eyeing the post of assistant deputy chief for security affairs in 
the Defense Ministry's secretariat. Should the NPA get the vice 
minister's post, it will have full command of security policy." 
 
The post of administrative vice defense minister had been a reserve 
seat for NPA and Finance Ministry officials during the period 
between its establishment in 1954 and Seiki Nishihiro's assumption 
of the post in 1988. If the ministry has a "vice minister" 
Nishikawa, it will be the first time in 16 years for an NPA official 
to assume that post, the last person having been Tomoharu Yoda. 
Moriya's predecessor, Yasunari Ito, was also a career defense-agency 
official. 
 
Moriya wants to see a career defense official to succeed him, 
because this will the first personnel appointment since the Defense 
Agency was upgraded to ministry status. However, some people doubt 
their abilities, with a government source saying: "The series of 
information-leak cases exposed defense officials' lack of 
experience." 
 
Prime Minister Abe told reporters at his official residence last 
evening: "We must pick a person who is proper for the office tasked 
with taking charge of security policy and protecting the people's 
 
TOKYO 00003768  006 OF 008 
 
 
lives and property." 
 
Administrative vice ministers over the past two decades and the 
government offices they came from 
 
1988 Seiki Nishihiro  Defense Agency (Defense Ministry now) 
1990 Tomoharu Yoda National Police Agency (NPA) 
1991 Akira Hiyoshi  Finance Ministry 
1993 Shigeru Hatakeyama Finance Ministry 
1995 Naoaki Murata Defense Ministry 
1997 Masahiro Akiyama Finance Ministry 
1998 Seiji Ema Defense Agency 
2000 Ken Sato Finance Ministry 
2002 Yasunari Ito Defense Agency 
2003 Takemasa Moriya Defense Agency 
 
(6) Peace for Japanese-Americans: Comfort women resolution shakes 
their self-identity 
 
ASAHI (Page 2) (Excerpts) 
 
In 1942 after Japan and the US plunged into war, the family of Mike 
Honda (66), a third-generation Japanese-American, was sent to Camp 
Amache in Colorado. The camp was surrounded by a vast stretch of 
desert. He clearly recalls that landscape, though he was one or two 
years old at that time. 
 
Japanese-Americans were confined, though they had done nothing 
wrong. Many second-generation Japanese Americans died fighting at 
the war front in Europe. 
 
Sixty-five years later, the infant confined to the camp is working 
as a Congressman at Capitol Hill in Washington, America's power 
center. 
 
The full House on July 30 adopted a resolution seeking a formal 
apology from the Japanese government regarding the wartime comfort 
women issue. Immediately after the adoption of the resolution, Honda 
breathed deeply and shook hands with other Congressmen. 
 
The Rafu Shimpo, a newspaper for Japanese-Americans in Los Angeles, 
carried a letter from a reader in July. The letter read: "It is 
absurd for a person with a Japanese face and name to adamantly seek 
an apology to comfort women from the Japanese government. The US has 
not offered an apology for the atomic-bombings. Will Mr. Honda be 
satisfied if all the Japanese commit harakiri?" 
 
People in the Japanese society in Los Angeles are dismayed, 
wondering why a Japanese-American congressman is seeking an apology 
from Japan. 
 
George Nakano, a third-generation Japanese-American, who served as a 
Californian State legislator in the same term as Honda did, noted, 
"I wonder whether this resolution is based on a humanitarian cause 
or for the sake of raising political funds." 
 
Tamon Norimoto (32), who is taking part in the plan to develop a 
Japan town in San Jose, which is part of Honda's constituency, is 
unable to find an answer. He said, "I think the resolution is 
correct. I as an Asian support the resolution, but as a 
Japanese-American I am half-distressed." 
 
 
TOKYO 00003768  007 OF 008 
 
 
Honda can say Japanese words smoothly -- benjo (lavatory), jichan 
(grandfather), chanbara (sword battle), etc. 
 
In the early 20th century, his grandfather and grandmother 
immigrated to the US from Kumamoto Prefecture. Since his mother was 
educated in Japan, she was unable to speak English. When he was a 
child, his mother tongue was Japanese. 
 
His parents were tenant strawberry growers. In order to survive the 
postwar US society they sealed themselves off from the world. As a 
result, Honda only recalls words he used as a child. 
 
I visited Honda at Capitol Hill several days after the adoption of 
the comfort women resolution. He said, "Japan is the home country of 
my grandfather and grandmother. I am proud of their culture. This 
face is a proof of my honor." I asked him, "Then why did you, who 
are a Japanese-American, call for an apology from the Japanese 
government over the comfort women issue?" 
 
He replied, "If you ask me such a question, you can put a bag on my 
head. Even if I had black skin or brown skin, I would have done the 
same thing." 
 
When he was young, Honda put much effort into a campaign demanding 
an apology from the US government over the relocation of 
Japanese-Americans. President Reagan signed the bill in 1988, 43 
years after the end of the war. 
 
He said, "The apology did not bring back the time lost and children 
who died. However, I felt we were right. We regained our dignity, if 
you like. " 
 
Honda intends to continue calling for an apology while comfort women 
are still alive. He said, "We have won an apology from the US. That 
is why we must win an apology to comfort women as well." Is he 
staging this campaign, even though he is a Japanese-American or he 
does so because he is a Japanese-American? Honda repeated, pointing 
to his face and chest, "Please do not judge me by what I look 
like." 
 
Reporter: Hiroki Manabe 
 
(7) Japan's effort to provide aid to Africa bogs down (part 1): 
European countries, the US increase aid; China increasing presence 
through resource diplomacy 
 
ASAHI (Page 3) (Excerpts) 
August 15, 2007 
 
The next G-8 Summit, which will focus on the Tokyo International 
Conference on African Development (TICAD) and Africa assistance, is 
to take place in Japan next year. European countries and the US, 
which take a great interest in eliminating poverty in Africa, have 
boosted aid. China is also expanding assistance in an effort to 
obtain resources. However, Japan is facing a policy dilemma as its 
policy is to reduce aid to developing countries due to the 
fiscal-austerity policy. Japan is under pressure to find a 
breakthrough in this situation and extend as a global citizen a 
helping hand to people suffering from poverty. 
 
Former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, chairman of the Japanese 
Association of Dietmembers League for Japan-Africa Friendship, 
 
TOKYO 00003768  008 OF 008 
 
 
stated at the Symposium Commemorating the Africa Day held in late 
May at the United Nations University in Tokyo: "The TICAD is 
considering assistance toward a bright direction. Prime Minister 
Abe's idea is to create an energetic Africa." He also stressed the 
meaning of the TICAD, which held its first meeting in 1993 and drew 
the world's attention back to aid to Africa. 
 
However, diplomats from Africa made harsh requests with one saying: 
"We need a new TICAD. A mechanism for materializing talks is 
sought," and another noting, "The TICAD is not a talk show to speak 
about Africa alone." 
 
The African Diplomatic Corps consisting of ambassadors from African 
nations pointed out in a letter of request addressed to the Foreign 
Ministry (MOFA), "It is questionable what impact the TICAD will have 
on the development of Africa and what it will bring to African 
countries." 
 
Members of the African Diplomatic Corps are irritated, because 
contrary to the prime minister's call for creating an energetic 
Africa, Japan's aid to Africa is sluggish. 
 
A mid-ranking Foreign Minister official responsible for relations 
with Africa lamented, "The end of money is the end of love. Japan's 
diplomacy toward Africa is up against a wall." 
 
Japan's aid to Africa has declined for the fourth straight year 
since 2004, reflecting a reduction in the official development 
assistance (ODA) as a whole. Then it jumped from approximately 650 
million dollars in 2004 to 1.14 billion dollars in 2005, following 
then Prime Minister Koizumi's announcement in April 2005 on his plan 
to double ODA to Africa over three years. However, major portions of 
the increase were debt forgiveness and yen loans. Grant aid almost 
leveled off. 
 
China's positive advance into Africa is pressing Japan to 
reconstruct its policy toward Africa. In recent years, China has 
intensively increased ODA to Africa, based on resource diplomacy 
aimed at securing oil and rare metals. Forty-four percent of its 
foreign aid is for Africa. It is estimated to come to about 50 
billion yen in monetary terms. 
 
Africa welcomes China's policy, because it produces results quickly 
and is easy to understand. China is steadily increasing its impact, 
by making efforts to strengthen relations with African nations 
through visits by the president, the premier and the foreign 
minister and the invitation of a plenary meeting of the African 
Development Bank. 
 
There is a deep-seated concern in MOFA that if China's influence 
increases in Africa, Japan would suffer a setback in collecting 
votes at international organizations, such as its bid to seek a 
permanent seat in the United Nations' Security Council. Director 
General for Sub-Saharan African Affairs Shuichiro Megata said, "We 
want to work on China to join the international community's effort 
to help Africa so that efforts by Japan and China will in the end 
lead to the development of Africa." 
 
MESERVE