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Donald Trump urges fairer trade with Japan

President kicks off 4-day Tokyo visit aimed at cementing ties.

Tokyo: President Donald Trump on Saturday vowed to make the US trade relationship with Japan a ‘little bit more fair,’ as he kicked off a four-day visit to Tokyo aimed at cementing ties between the two close allies. Trump’s four-day trip is expected to feature plenty of warm words and images as he plays golf and watches sumo with his ‘friend’ Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister.

But the world’s top and third-biggest economies are also thrashing out a trade deal and Trump wasted no time in lashing out at what he sees as an imbalance between the pair.

“Japan has had a substantial edge for many, many years. But that’s OK, maybe that's why you like us so much," Trump told leaders from some of Japan's leading companies, including Toyota, Honda and Nissan.

After a bilateral trade deal has been signed, it will be ‘a little bit more fair,’ vowed the president. “With this deal we hope to address the trade imbalance, remove the barriers to United States exports and ensure fairness and reciprocity in our relationship. We're getting close," said Trump.

He added: "We hope to have several further announcements soon and some very big ones over the next few months."

Some observers suspect Abe is rolling out the red carpet to present Japan as the most favourable of the countries currently engaged in trade disputes with Washington but little concrete progress is expected with elections looming for the Japanese PM.

Japanese and US officials hail as ‘unprecedented’ the relationship between Trump and his ‘golf buddy’ Abe.

Just over an hour before Trump arrived, a 5.1-magnitude earthquake rattled buildings in Tokyo, with the epicentre very close to where the leaders are due to tee off.

Japanese wrestler Asanoyama will receive the ‘president’s cup’ – weighing 60-70 pounds (27-32 kilos) and measuring 54 inches (1.4 metres) – after his win as Trump was arriving on Saturday gave him a 12-2 record and put him out of reach on the final day.

The leaders will play golf before going to the sumo and then repair with their wives to a restaurant in Tokyo's Roppongi entertainment district, where the menu features skewers of prime sirloin beef at 5,184 yen ($47) for two.

Abe has just recently returned from Washington and Trump himself will be coming back to Japan in just over a month for the Group of 20 leaders' summit in the western city of Osaka.

The relationship between the former war-time foes ‘has never been stronger, has never been more powerful, has never been closer,’ Trump said.

"This is an exciting time for commerce between the two countries that we both love.” The formal diplomatic part of the trip is limited to a short bilateral meeting and a working lunch on Monday, after which the two leaders will brief the media.

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