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| - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga sent a ritual offering Wednesday to the controversial Yasukuni shrine that honours war dead, including perpetrators of the country's World War II atrocities on its neighbours. South Korea expressed "deep disappointment" at Suga's offering to the shrine to mark a spring festival, with China also likely to be angered by the move. The Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo honours some 2.5 million war dead, mostly Japanese, who perished in the country's wars since the late 19th century. But it also honours senior military and political figures convicted of war crimes, and has frequently been a source of sour relations with countries that suffered from Japan's military atrocities -- particularly China and South Korea. In a statement Seoul's foreign ministry expressed "deep disappointment and regret" over Suga's tribute and urged Japan's leaders to "face history squarely and humbly and truly reflect on the past." "Japan should keep in mind that is the basis of a future-oriented Korea-Japan relationship," it added. Suga's predecessor Shinzo Abe, who stepped down last year for health reasons, visited the shrine in person on Wednesday. Suga sent a sacred tree but was not expected to visit the shrine. A 2013 visit to the shrine by Abe, when he was serving as prime minister, sparked outcry from Beijing and Seoul, as well as a rare diplomatic rebuke from close ally the United States. sah/kaf/rma
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