Tokyo: The leaders of China and Japan held talks on Wednesday for only the second time since taking office, a Japanese official said, seeking to repair a relationship damaged by territorial disputes and a bitter wartime legacy.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met on the sidelines of a summit in the Indonesian capital Jakarta, the official told AFP, speaking anonymously.

It was a significant step following their first meeting at a summit in November last year in China, where they shared an awkward handshake. 

However, just before the meeting, Abe, a strident nationalist, stoked fresh regional anger by stopping short of apologising for Japan`s World War II rampage through Asia in a speech to the gathering of Asian and African leaders.