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Former Japanese residents of Kurils disappointed with results of Putin-Abe meeting — Kyodo

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe held a meeting in Moscow on January 22

TOKYO, January 23. /TASS/. Former Japanese residents of the southern Kuril Islands were disappointed with the results of the negotiations held between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Moscow on Tuesday, Kyodo News reported.

"We don’t understand the direction in which [these negotiations] are moving. Nothing new was said, which is regrettable. We would like Prime Minister [Shinzo] Abe to conduct resolute negotiations instead of moving with the pace set by the Russian side," Kyodo News quoted chief of the association of former islanders Ryoichi Miyauchi as saying. He also hopes that during the Russian president’s upcoming visit to Japan "a specific structure for the signing of the peace treaty" will be presented and "specific results will be shown."

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe held a meeting in Moscow on Tuesday, which became the 25th and confirmed the two state leaders’ intention to establish and develop mutually beneficial relations. In more than three hours of negotiations which were held "in a businesslike and very constructive atmosphere" most attention was paid, as usual, to the prospects of extending trade-investment ties, Putin said. The prospects of signing a peace treaty between Russia and Japan became one of the central issues. The Russian state leader confirmed Moscow’s intention to build the negotiation process on this issue based on the Soviet-Japanese declaration signed in 1956.