ラベル talks の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示
ラベル talks の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示

2011年9月16日金曜日

Japan's premier tough talks 'an alarm signal' - China Daily

BEIJING - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said on Wednesday he was concerned about China's military development, urging his neighbor to act as a "responsible member of the international community".

"I am concerned about their reinforcement of national defense power, which lacks transparency, and their acceleration of maritime activities," Noda told the Japanese parliament.

This is not the first time Noda, labeled as hawkish toward China, has made such statements in public.

In an article published in the latest edition of the Japanese magazine Bungei Shunju, he said China's "high-handed foreign posture ... backed by its military capabilities ... is stoking fears that China will disrupt the order within the region".

"Noda's accusation that China lacks transparency in its military development is invalid as the definition of 'transparency' is ambiguous," said Liu Jiangyong, a professor of Japanese studies at Tsinghua University in Beijing.

"Nations' armed forces are by nature highly confidential."

Yang Bojiang, a professor of Japanese studies at the Beijing-based University of International Relations, said Noda's remarks were partly catering to domestic public opinion, as he got elected at a tough time for Japan.

Yang added that, as a realist, Noda would adopt policies that would protect both national interests and his own leadership, as the ability to successfully manage relations with China has become a yardstick for Japan's leader.

This was evident in Noda's speech to the parliament. Though voicing his concern about China's military development, he also said Japan wants to deepen relations with China in the run-up to next year's 40th anniversary of the restoration of diplomatic ties, adding that he planned to visit China at a convenient time for both sides.

He also altered his stance toward historical problems by pledging he would not visit the Yasukuni Shrine during his premiership.

Before taking office, he said he did not believe Japan's Class A war criminals of World War II were guilty of war crimes.

Yasuo Ichikawa, Japan's new defense minister, has also tried recently to soothe relations.

He said that while the alliance with the United States remains the core of Tokyo's security policy, he wants to improve ties between the armed forces of China and Japan.

"Any mishandling of relations with China will result in criticism by opposition lawmakers, and perhaps from those in his own party as well," Michael Auslin, director of Japan studies at the American Enterprise Institute, said in an article published in the Wall Street Journal.

"Noda cannot afford to isolate Japan any further," Auslin said.

But Noda's reassuring words can hardly offset his remarks on China's military, which will deepen Beijing's distrust about his China policy, said Yang.

Yang said these remarks "send an alarm signal" ahead of his China visit, which could take place as early as next month.

"It added a dimension to Chinese leaders' expectations of their upcoming talks," said Yang.

Gao Yuan contributed to the story.

China Daily


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2011年9月14日水曜日

Noda intends to join TPP talks

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda expressed his eagerness Monday to pursue negotiations to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade agreement.

During talks with Hiromasa Yonekura, chairman of Keidanren, Japan's biggest business lobby, Noda said Japan "must push forward" the negotiations on the multilateral free trade framework together with talks involving other free trade deals, according to Yonekura.

The government was initially scheduled to decide whether to join talks with countries involved in the TPP by around June, but the decision was delayed because it had to focus on reconstruction efforts following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.


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2011年9月5日月曜日

Clothesline's most well-known artist talks about a life shaped by clay - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle

In the 38 years that Stephen Merritt has showcased his work at the M&T Bank Clothesline Festival, he has seen it all. Heavy rains, windstorms and extreme heat, beating down on his delicate art pottery.

"About the only weather I haven't encountered is snow," Merritt says with a chuckle.

Merritt has displayed and sold his ceramics at every Clothesline show except last year's, when the MAG had construction blocking his usual site in front of the University Avenue entrance. He decided that was a sign to try something else and opted for a festival in St. Louis.

He'll be back at the Rochester festival next Saturday and Sunday, though, having vowed never to test the Clothesline gremlins again. Too many things went wrong last year when he traveled.

Merritt is perhaps the most well-known of all the festival's artists; his pottery is in the Smithsonian Institution collection and Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass. He no longer does the festival circuit, opting for only a few and, in Rochester, only Clothesline.

"The art gallery needs the recognition of the local arts community," Merritt says. "If people who have an interest in the arts community don't show their support, that strength is weakened."

Clothesline ? considered the premier arts festival in the Rochester area by art enthusiasts ? has helped launch the careers of many prominent artists, including Merritt, who through the years has showcased his Asian-inspired works alongside other Rochester notables such as the painter Ramon Santiago and sculptor Nancy Jurs. Now in its 55th year, the juried art show draws about 20,000 visitors from the region to see about 400 artists, says Joe Carney, director of advancement at the Memorial Art Gallery.

Taking shape

Merritt's roots in pottery began in Nagasaki, Japan, more than 40 years ago, where he and his wife, Donna, worked as English teachers. He trained with two sensei during his tenure there ? first with Ishikawa Seiho in stoneware and then with Inoue Manji in porcelain. In the 1960s, being a pottery artist was considered an artistic hippie-type career in the United States, but in Japan the art form was held in high regard, and skills were passed from generation to generation.

"You are either a part of a family of potters or you studied with a master," Merritt says.

Most students start out as apprentices doing grunt work, but Seiho took Merritt under his wing, perhaps because he was delighted to see an American, Merritt recalls. Seiho is considered the founder of modern Unzen-style pottery and once presented a tea bowl and vase to the emperor and empress of Japan, a high honor for an artist in that country.

Following his work with Seiho, Merritt continued his studies with Manji, learning the art of porcelain making. Porcelain is a more delicate medium requiring more precision, Merritt says.

Coming home

The Merritts returned to Rochester in 1972, and Stephen Merritt set out to begin his artistic career. To make it work, he juggled two other part-time jobs.

That same year, Merritt debuted his work at Clothesline, selling his small pots for $2 to $3 a piece.

Yearning to make a full-time living as a potter to support his family, Merritt sought out different techniques. He tried his hand at production pottery, making lower-priced functional pieces such as mugs in large quantities, but his heart just wasn't in it.

He wanted to make fine art, but he needed to find a style and then market himself in a way that set him apart. The young artist then recalled his training in Japan where large pieces were created in sections, enabling a potter to make major sculptural works. Merritt applied that technique to his own vessels, which were well-received among art collectors.

"It's a more dramatic art form," Merritt says of large works.

As his popularity grew, Merritt eventually gave up his part-time jobs, making ceramics his full-time occupation to support his wife and five children. In the studio at his Irondequoit home (they moved there in 1976), Merritt works in quiet tranquility, shaping and molding his pots and firing them in a kiln.

A distinct style

Merritt works in porcelain and terracotta, though he is perhaps better known for his terracotta creations. His style is often identified by his one-stem vases, popular in Japanese pottery; the etched, clean lines around his vases give them a contemporary look. "The influence of being in Japan is a strong one," Merritt says.

Marjorie Searl, chief curator at the Memorial Art Gallery, has been collecting Merritt's work for 20 years, attracted to the elegance of its form, the subtlety of its color and mastery of the ceramics process. "He seems to 'hit it' exactly right in each piece," Searl says. "For me, a ceramic piece feels right in a physical and a visual way, almost as though the pulse of the artist's hand remains. I feel that essence in Steve's work."

Over the years, Merritt continues to experiment with form and push the limits of scale, Searl says. "I am particularly impressed with his ability and interest in combining the most bulbous, rounded body with the most narrow and elongated neck," she says, noting that she and her husband, Scott, enjoy a variety of Merritt's work, both large and small and with different glazes.

Merritt also gives back to the local arts community, Searl says. His "Art in June" series brings people from all over the community to his studio to see his work and the work of other Rochester artists, Searl notes.

The art of listening

Merritt enjoys talking to people, says the MAG's Carney. That rapport could be why he returns to Clothesline year after year.

It takes thick skin to interact with an audience, Merritt says. People, by nature, can be critical of art when it doesn't fit their tastes. With time, an artist learns to not take criticism personally and to use feedback to improve his body of work, he says.

Doing an outdoor show for any artist also is challenging because you are at the whim of Mother Nature, Merritt says

Yet he plans to continue his long tenure at Clothesline because he believes in the MAG's mission and supports how the festival helps emerging artists make names for themselves.

He also likes to mingle with fellow artists and art fans he sees each year. "You have the legitimacy of Rochester's premier art institution," Merritt says. "It's probably the best way to market yourself."

MCHAO@DemocratandChronicle.com


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2011年8月31日水曜日

ANZ in Talks to Acquire Japan's Aozora Bank - Wall Street Journal

Seeking to take another step in its Asian expansion, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group is in early talks with Aozora Bank Ltd. about a possible acquisition of the midsize Japanese lender, said people familiar with the matter.

Aozora, majority-owned by U.S. investment firm Cerberus Capital Management LP, has a market value of about US$4 billion, according to data provider Capital IQ.

Melbourne-based ANZ is looking to grow in Asia at a time when the Australian economy is starting to show signs of strain and its banks are contending with subdued credit growth at home. ANZ aims to get 25% ...

Seeking to take another step in its Asian expansion, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group is in early talks with Aozora Bank Ltd. about a possible acquisition of the midsize Japanese lender, said people familiar with the matter.

Aozora, majority-owned by U.S. investment firm Cerberus Capital Management LP, has a market value of about US$4 billion, according to data provider Capital IQ.

Melbourne-based ANZ is looking to grow in Asia at a time when the Australian economy is starting to show signs of strain and its banks are contending with subdued credit growth at home. ANZ aims to get 25% ...


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Australia's ANZ in early talks to buy Japan's Aozora Bank-sources - Reuters

SYDNEY | Tue Aug 30, 2011 4:10am EDT

SYDNEY Aug 30 (Reuters) - Australia and New Zealand Banking Group is in early stage talks to buy Japan's Aozora Bank which has a market value of $4.2 billion, two sources familiar with the deal said on Tuesday, as it seeks to expand in Asia.

ANZ is eyeing Aozora for its deposit base and also to use it as a springboard to tap trade flows in Japan, which is Australia's second-largest trading partner after China.

"The talks are at an embryonic stage," one source said, adding the deal should satisfy all the main parameters such as pricing and potential for return on investments.

An ANZ spokesman declined comment on any deal but said the bank was always looking at opportunities to advance its Asian strategy, which calls for its Asian businesses to account for up to 30 percent of group profit by 2017.

On Monday the Australian Financial Review said ANZ was looking at buying either Japan's Tokyo Star Bank or Aozora Bank.

Aozora Bank is majority-owned by private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management .

Aozora shares have risen 14 percent over the past two days on expectations of an ANZ bid.

ANZ is looking at Asia for growth and has invested nearly $6 billion in capital in the region to grow its institutional, trading desks and wealth advisory arm.

It bought some Asian assets of RBS in 2009 for $550 million but its recent efforts to buy in Asia have been stymied. It lost out on a bid to gain control of Korea Exchange Bank for nearly $4 billion last year.

ANZ shares ended 0.15 percent lower at A$20.18 on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Narayanan Somasundaram; Editing by Mark Bendeich)


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2011年8月21日日曜日

Japan PM drops plan to visit US for summit talks - Sacramento Bee

Japan US

FILE - In this Aug. 9, 2011 file photo, Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan delivers a speech during a ceremony to mark the 66th anniversary of the atomic bombing in Nagasaki, southern Japan. Kan, under pressure to resign within weeks, has declined Washington's invitation for a visit to hold talks with President Barack Obama next month, chief cabinet secretary announced Friday. Aug. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

TOKYO -- Japan's prime minister, under pressure to resign within weeks, has declined Washington's invitation for a visit to hold talks with President Barack Obama next month.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano announced the decision Friday, citing "Japan's political situation," suggesting uncertainty over Prime Minister Naoto Kan's leadership.

Kan has faced a strong challenge from party rivals who have demanded his resignation. Kan has said he will step down when a pair of key bills are approved in parliament, which is likely next week. That would set the stage for a leadership election within Kan's ruling party, expected by the end of the month.

"It is extremely regrettable that we have to rearrange a visit at the invitation of President Obama," Edano said. "We will reschedule a visit at an appropriate time as we continue our effort to achieve unshakable Japan-U.S. relations."

Obama invited Kan to the U.S. for talks in early September when the two leaders met in France during May's Group of Eight summit. The March disaster had forced Kan to postpone his earlier plan to visit the U.S. in the first half of this year.

Kan and his Cabinet have faced criticism over their handling of the March 11 disasters due to a perceived lack of leadership as the disaster survivors grew frustrated by slow-paced relief and reconstruction efforts.

The earthquake and tsunami wiped out large parts of Japan's northeast coastline and left just over 20,000 people died or disappeared. Another 100,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes due to radiation threats from the tsunami-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, whose reactors have melted down in the first few days of the crisis.

As Kan's days are numbered, Japanese media have shifted their focus to candidates to be his successor. Among several reported frontrunners are Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda and trade and industry minister Banri Kaieda.

Kaieda, who has several policy disputes with Kan over the nuclear crisis management over the past weeks, has vowed to resign from his current post.

Suggesting a possibility of having a new prime minister within weeks, Edano said he believed "a prime minister at that point" would attend the United Nation's General Assembly in September.

Edano said Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto recently informed U.S. Ambassador John Roos of Kan's cancellation of his U.S. trip and obtained Washington's understanding.

Kan's successor would be the sixth prime minister in five years.

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2011年8月20日土曜日

Japan PM drops plan to visit US for summit talks (AP)

TOKYO – Japan's prime minister, under pressure to resign within weeks, has declined Washington's invitation for a visit to hold talks with President Barack Obama next month.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano announced the decision Friday, citing "Japan's political situation," suggesting uncertainty suggesting Prime Minister Naoto Kan's leadership.

Kan has faced a strong challenge from party rivals who have demanded his resignation. Kan has said he will step down when a pair of key bills are approved in parliament, which is likely next week. That would set the stage for a leadership election within Kan's ruling party, expected by the end of the month.

"It is extremely regrettable that we have to rearrange a visit at the invitation of President Obama," Edano said. "We will reschedule a visit at an appropriate time as we continue our effort to achieve an unshakable Japan-U.S. relations."

Obama invited Kan to the U.S. for talks in early September when the two leaders met in France during May's Group of Eight summit.

Kan and his Cabinet have faced criticism over their handling of the March 11 disasters due to a perceived lack of leadership as the disaster survivors grew frustrated by slow-paced relief and reconstruction efforts.

The earthquake and tsunami wiped out large parts of Japan's northeast coastline and left just over 20,000 people died or disappeared. Another 100,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes due to radiation threats from the tsunami-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, whose reactors have melted down in the first few days of the crisis.

As Kan's days are numbered, Japanese media have shifted their focus to candidates to be his successor. Among several reported frontrunners are Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda and trade and industry minister Banri Kaieda.

Kaieda, who has several policy disputes with Kan over the nuclear crisis management over the past weeks, has vowed to resign from his current post.

Suggesting a possibility of having a new prime minister within weeks, Edano said he believed "a prime minister at that point" would attend the United Nation's General Assembly in September.

Edano said Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto recently informed U.S. Ambassador John Roos of Kan's cancellation of his U.S. trip and obtained Washington's understanding.

Kan's successor would be the sixth prime minister in five years.


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