TOKYO, March 29 - Nearly four in five Japanese believe Japan and China 
should improve bilateral ties, chilled by disputes including Prime Minister 
Junichiro Koizumi's visits to a Tokyo war shrine, according to a survey released 
by Japan's Foreign Ministry on Wednesday. 
 
 
 |  Japan's Prime 
 Minister Junichiro Koizumi listens to a question from an opposition at an 
 Upper House budget committee session of parliament in Tokyo March 17, 
 2006. [Reuters]
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Relations 
between the two Asian powers are at their worst state in decades, chilled by 
disputes including Koizumi's pilgrimages to Yasukuni Shrine, which are 
widely seen as a symbol of Japan's past militarism because it honours 
convicted war criminals along with the country's war dead. 
A nationwide survey of 2,000 voters conducted by the Foreign Ministry on 
February 10-13 found that 77.9 percent of the respondents believe Tokyo and 
Beijing should improve bilateral ties. 
It did not say what steps the two countries should take to improve ties. 
Nearly half the respondents, or 46.5 percent, said they thought Sino-Japanese 
ties would improve in the next 20 years, the poll said. 
Only 10.7 percent said they thought relations would grow worse, it showed. 
Bitter memories linger in China of Japan's invasion and occupation of parts 
of the nation before and during World War Two, and ties have deteriorated 
sharply since Koizumi took office in 2001 and began his annual visits to the 
shrine. 
China has repeatedly said the Yasukuni visits are one of the biggest blocks 
to better relations. 
Koizumi criticised China's stance on Monday, saying the shrine issue should 
not stand in the way of summit meetings between the two nations. 
He said he advocates friendly relations with China and repeated earlier 
statements that he visits Yasukuni to pray for peace. 
Several Japanese groups promoting Japan-China friendship plan to travel to 
China later this week in an effort to warm bilateral ties. 
Former Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto, who heads one of the 
groups, will be among the 27 people taking part in the visit, which includes a 
meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao which Japanese media say will take 
place on Friday.