
Chinese President Hu Jintao (4th L) attends a calligraphy show
with representatives from both China and Japan during the opening ceremony of
the China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year of the Youth at Renmin University in
Beijing, March 15, 2008.
BEIJING, March 15 (Xinhua) -- Chinese and Japanese youth celebrated the
opening ceremony of the China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year of the Youth here on
Saturday afternoon, marking the official launch of the year-long exchange
program.
President Hu Jintao met with principal members of the 1,000-strong Japanese
delegation at Beijing's Renmin University and watched a calligraphy show and tea
ceremony given by the Chinese and Japanese youth.
They were the first foreign delegate Hu has met since being re-elected as
Chinese president on Saturday morning.
During the meeting, Hu told Yotaro Kobayashi, the chief Japanese member of
the new 21st Century Committee for China-Japan Friendship, that it accords with
the fundamental interests of both countries to develop a good-neighborly
relationship of long-term stability.
He pledged to expand cooperation with Japan and further develop
mutually-beneficial ties based on common strategic interests.
"I am looking forward to the coming visit to Japan, and hope our two
countries could lay out the future of the bilateral relations through the
visit."
Kobayashi said Hu showed great enthusiasm for the Japan-China ties and he
placed high hopes on the youth by showing up at the ceremony amid his tight
agenda during the annual parliamentary session.
He also delivered a letter from Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda to Hu.

Chinese President Hu Jintao (1st R) waters a tree with a Japanese
representative after planting it during the opening ceremony of the China-Japan
Friendly Exchange Year of the Youth at Renmin University in Beijing, March 15,
2008.
After the meeting, Hu attended an art performance and talked to some of the
2,008 youngsters present -- 1,008 from China and 1,000Japan.
"I love staying with youth, not only due to my working experience in youth
affairs, but because youth are the hopes and future of the world," he told
youngsters at Renmin University stadium.
Recalling the China visit of 3,000 Japanese youngsters in 1984, Hu said
such friendship was the basis of the China-Japan friendly ties and should be
started with youth exchanges.
He called on youth from both countries to make extensive exchanges and make
contributions for the future.
Later on, Hu, together with young representatives from both countries,
planted sakura and yulan trees on campus.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda also
both sent congratulatory messages to the ceremony.
The Japanese delegation, who arrived in China on Monday, was led by
Japanese Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Osamu Uno.
The delegation consists of 500 high school students, 200 university
students and 300 young representatives from various walks of life such as
parliamentarians, government officials, businessmen and journalists.
Breaking into small groups, they respectively visited such cities as
Shanghai and Hangzhou in the east, Chongqing and Chengduin the west, Guangzhou
in the south, Dalian and Shenyang in the northeast and held get-togethers with
their Chinese peers before their arrival in Beijing on Friday.
The China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year of the Youth was created last year
by Wen and Fukuda when the two met over lunch in Singapore at the Asian Summit
in November. A memorandum of understanding on the youth exchange year was signed
during Fukuda's China visit in December.
It also marks the 30th anniversary of the signing of the China-Japan Peace
and Friendship Treaty.
A series of youth exchange activities will be conducted over the course of
the year in the fields of culture, academia, environmental protection, science
and technology, media, tourism, film and television.
Chinese youth will visit Japan later in the year.