Ukrainian-Japanese relations ( Japanese 日 宇 関係, に ち う か ん け い ) were officially launched in 1992 .
| Confession | December 28, 1991 [1] |
| Relations | January 26, 1992 [1] |
| Embassies |
|
| Economic relations | |
| Yap. export | 362 billion yen [1] |
| Yap. import | 196 billion yen [1] |
In 1991 , Japan recognized the independence of Ukraine and established interstate relations. However, relations between the two countries are in their infancy. Japan does not invest in the Ukrainian economy, and its enterprises are practically not represented on the Ukrainian market. Ukraine, for its part, does not create the conditions for proper investment, it impedes the development of bilateral relations. As of 2009 , the amount of financial assistance to Ukraine from Japan, including loans, amounted to 85.11 million US dollars [2] . Cultural and scientific ties between the two countries are at the level of fact-finding exhibitions, short-term internships, language courses for beginners. Compared with foreigners from America , Europe or Asia , the Japanese practically do not visit Ukraine. The growth of Japanese interest in Ukraine took place during the 2004 Orange Revolution . Tokyo hoped for a democratic and reformed Ukraine to appear, seeing in it a force that could restrain Russia in the west. However, this interest gradually faded due to the inefficiency of the work of the governments of Viktor Yushchenko and the coming to power of Viktor Yanukovych , who in Japanese official circles had a reputation as a pro-Russian politician [3] .
Content
Population
Japanese in Ukraine
- 202 people (as of 2009) [1]
- 210 people (as of January 2012) [1]
Ukrainians in Japan
- 907 ( 2005 ) [4]
- 1590 people ( 2009 ) [1]
- 1,507 people (December 2010) [1]
Ukrainian Non-Governmental Organizations in Japan
- Mission of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kiev Patriarchate in Japan
- Community of Ukrainians in Japan "Krayany"
- Ukrainian school "Rodnichok"
See also
- Ukrainian-Manchu relations
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ukraine.
- ↑ Ministry of Foreign Justice of Japan . Ukraine Profile Materials of the Japanese filial Ofitsіynoї support for development . Table No. 4 - 5. - S.1044-1045. . Cabinet of Ministers of Japan (2009). Date of treatment June 9, 2011. Archived June 25, 2013.
- ↑ (Japanese) Presidential vibori in Ukraine. Ex-prem'єr Yanukovych and prem'єr Tymoshenko in the final vote of 7 fierce // Asakhі Simbun . 2010-1-19; (Japanese) Yanukovych shifted on the presidential vibrators in Ukraine // Asakhi Simbun . 2010-2-9; (Japanese) Abi vryatuvati Ukraine vid Yanukovych ... // Asahі Sіmbun . 2010-8-10
- ↑ 113 kozakiv, 794 women. Dani census of the population of Japan 2005 rock. Tables on foreign trade in Japan (2008-6-30).
Literature
- Ekemura E. Shevchenko in Japan // Shevchenko and World Culture . Moscow, 1964;
- Suite I. Ukrainian-Japanese relations 1903-1945 . New York, 1972.
- Andrey Popok. The activities of the Ukrainian press in the Far East // Almanac of the UNSoyuz for 1998 - Parsippany-New York., 1997. - S. 196-208.
- Andrei Popok / Kiev / Socio-political and religious life of Ukrainians in the Far East in the XX century. // Ukrainian historical journal . - K. - 1998. - No. 6. - S. 54-68.
- Rudnitsky I. From a trip around the world, 1970-1971 . Winnipeg, 1972.
- Japan and Ukraine - Different Fates, Common Hopes (Russian)