fbpx

Type to search

Kishida-Xi Talks May Touch on Arrests Killing Bilateral Business

The arrest of a prominent Japanese executive in China has caused a chill in dealings; Japanese investment has plunged this year and many Japanese are too scared to even work in the country


Japanese PM Fumio Kishida meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at the APEC Summit in Bangkok, November 2022 (Kyodo via Reuters).

 

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at the APEC summit in California this week and one topic likely to be raised is the prosecution of a high-profile Japanese businessman.

The arrest in March of Hiroshi Nishiyama, on suspicion of espionage, has been a major blow to the two countries’ close economic ties. An executive with drugmaker Astellas Pharma, Nishiyama is also a well-connected veteran in the Japanese community in China.

The case against him and a handful of other Japanese imprisoned or facing criminal probes in China will probably be among topics discussed as plans are finalised for the leaders to talk on the sidelines of the APEC summit in San Francisco on Thursday, sources have said.

Officials in Tokyo have said the arrest of Nishiyama has had a chilling effect on business, contributing to a drop in foreign investment to its lowest since at least 2014 and accelerating an exodus of expats.

 

ALSO SEE: China’s Top Bank Paid Ransom After Cyber Attack, Gang Says

 

‘Japanese people too scared to work in China’

“I know Japanese businesses are rethinking,” Rahm Emanuel, the US ambassador to Japan, said in an interview. “Right now, you can’t get people to go staff the companies in China because they’re scared of their own safety.”

After seven months in detention, Nishiyama was formally charged in mid-October. Japan’s then foreign minister protested the executive’s detention with his Chinese counterpart on a visit to Beijing in April.

There has been no official confirmation of the Kishida-Xi meeting, which some Japanese news outlets say is being prepared for Thursday. Japan and China’s foreign ministries did not immediately respond to requests for comment on this article.

China has previously said it welcomes foreign investment as long as firms abide by its laws.

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told a news conference on Monday that Tokyo had asked Beijing “at various levels and on various occasions” to realise the early return of Japanese nationals detained in China and to ensure a transparent legal process.

 

People ‘fear being arrested’

Japan’s Foreign Ministry has said five of their nationals are currently detained in China, out of a total of 17 detained since 2015, the year after China’s anti-espionage law initially took effect.

But the arrest of Nishiyama hit a nerve partly because of the timing – coming during a sweeping national security crackdown and because of the executive’s high profile.

Nishiyama, a fluent Mandarin speaker and former board member of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce in China, attended several high-profile events with officials from both countries in recent years.

He often spoke about his connections to officialdom, two people who knew him said, on condition of anonymity.

Because of Nishiyama’s status, his arrest had symbolic importance, according to five Japanese government officials, who also spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the case.

The officials said since his detention there has been a sharp uptick in questions from business people asking if it is safe to travel to China, while some Japanese companies in China have been telling employees to keep a low profile and not push too hard in sales and other activities.

“People are worried that they may be arrested suddenly when they go to China,” Takeshi Niinami, chairman of Japan Association of Corporate Executives, told a news conference last month.

“Considering the current situation in China, it is very difficult to create an atmosphere that encourages people to do something new,” said Niinami, who is also the CEO of drinks giant Suntory.

 

Japanese FDI in China at lowest in nine years

In the first nine months of this year, Japan’s net foreign direct investment (FDI) into mainland China slumped 30.6% on the year to 393.4 billion yen ($2.6 billion), even as its total worldwide FDI grew by a nearly a fifth, according to ministry of finance data.

That is the lowest amount for the period going back to at least 2014 when the data series begins.

Half of respondents to a recent survey of Japanese companies doing business in China said they would cut investments this year. Only 10% of the 8,300 firms said they would increase investments, according to the inaugural poll by the Japanese Chamber of Commerce in China published last month.

The reasons for caution given by respondents included sluggish demand, cross border regulation and “concerns about the risk of investment in China at head office”.

Alongside the US, China is Japan’s biggest trade partner, and a major unwind of that relationship is not on the immediate horizon, economists say.

But finding Japanese to staff offices in China could become more of a problem for Japanese firms.

The number of Japanese living in China has been on a steady decline over the last decade and totalled 102,066 in 2022, according to data collected by Japan’s foreign ministry. A similar drop this year would mark the lowest number of expats there since at least 2004.

A real estate agent in Beijing, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Astellas case had a “huge impact” on his Japanese clients with people refusing assignments in China or their families opposing the moves because they are “scared” about getting in legal trouble.

Stefan Angrick, a senior economist for Moody’s Analytics based in Tokyo, said even some of the most pro-China business executives in Japan are now wary of security risks there.

“Japan and China are two economies that are deeply intertwined with one another and are incredibly important for one another. It’s a very difficult point in time to be navigating that as a decision-maker, in business or politics,” he said.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

NOTE: The photo on this report was changed on November 14, 2023.

 

ALSO SEE:

 

Fears of China’s ‘Japanization’ Weigh On Asia Economic Outlook

 

Japan Seen Provoking China With Taiwan Security Ties Upgrade

 

Japan Sees Big Blow From Hong Kong Ban on Most of its Seafood

 

Japan Signals It Would Aid Taiwan if China Attacked – Telegraph

 

Japan Joins Chip Curbs on China, Despite Unease in Tokyo

 

US, Japan Chips Alliance Aims to Thwart China Ambitions

 

Japan Megabanks Sounded Out Over China Exposure Risks

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

logo

AF China Bond