South Koreans displease China more than Japan

The fight between Seoul and Beijing over the deployment of a US missile defence system has seen China overtake even former coloniser Japan in the ranking of South Koreans' least favoured countries, a survey shows. 

Japan has consistently been South Koreans’ most disliked country after North Korea, mainly due to disputes over Tokyo's wartime atrocities including the use of up to 200,000 Korean women as sexual slaves for Japanese troops. 

But now South Korea and the US have begun deploying the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (Thaad) system to guard against missile threats from the nuclear-armed North, infuriating Beijing, which sees it as compromising its own capabilities. 

Beijing launched a series of measures against the South seen as economic retaliation, forcing dozens of South Korean retail stores on the mainland to shut their doors and banning Chinese tour groups from visiting. 

China's rating in an opinion poll by the Asian Institute for Policy Studies slumped from 4.31 in January to 3.21 in March, on a 0-10 scale, with 10 representing the most favourable. Japan's number also fell amid a diplomatic row over the "comfort women" issue, from 3.56 to 3.33. 

A drop in the Chinese figure was expected given Beijing's response to Thaad but the "sharp decline" was surprising, Asan said in a statement. "Even more surprising is that Koreans are now more favourable toward Japan (3.33) than China (3.21)," it said. 

The survey also showed the ratings of President Xi Jinping, US President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe all declining, but Xi's fell the most, plunging from 4.25 in January to 3.01 in March. "The only good news for President Xi was that his rating remained higher than Prime Minister Abe's," Asan said. 

The survey, of 1000 adults carried out from March 6-8, also showed increasing support for Thaad, with 50.6 percent in favour, up from 46.3 percent in November, with opposition falling from 45.7 percent to 37.9 percent

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