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Japanese travel warning shows Tokyo does not want to develop ties with Moscow, says Kremlin

Japanese travel warning shows Tokyo does not want to develop ties with Moscow, says Kremlin

MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin said on Monday that Japan's stance that its citizens should avoid traveling to Russia showed that Tokyo was increasingly aligned with "the collective West" and that its leadership did not want to develop ties with Moscow.

The Kyodo news agency reported on Monday that Muneo Suzuki, a veteran Japanese lawmaker known for advocating close ties with Russia, was visiting Moscow for talks with government officials in defiance of a government advisory against such trips.

It cited Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi as saying that a government advisory was in place urging its nationals, including legislators, to avoid traveling to Russia.

When asked about the matter, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that the Japanese leadership appeared to be seeking to pressure Japanese citizens who wanted to improve ties with Moscow from visiting Russia.

Asked if there would be contacts between Suzuki and the Kremlin, Peskov said there were none planned.

"It is clear that Tokyo is dominated by figures who are not in favour of developing bilateral relations.

Unfortunately, the current leadership of Japan has expressed solidarity with the unfriendly, for Russia, actions of the collective West, and this cannot but be detrimental to our bilateral relations," Peskov said.

"Unfortunately, the leadership of the country (Japan) does not limit itself to this attitude towards our country and tries to pressure those who share a different point of view and try to find ways to establish contacts."

Tokyo and Moscow have long been embroiled in a territorial dispute over four islands off the coast of Japan, something that has prevented the countries from formally concluding a peace treaty since the end of World War Two. 

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