Japan PM offers gift to Tokyo war shrine | Inquirer News

Japan PM offers gift to Tokyo war shrine

/ 12:54 PM October 17, 2015

Shinzo Abe

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a statement to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II during a press conference at his official residence in Tokyo Friday, Aug. 14, 2015. AP Photo

TOKYO, Japan—Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Saturday made a ritual offering to the controversial Yasukuni war shrine seen by neighboring countries as a symbol of Tokyo’s militarist past.

Abe donated a sacred “masakaki” tree bearing his name as prime minister to coincide with the start of the four-day autumn festival at the shrine in central Tokyo, a shrine official said.

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But he will likely stop short of visiting in person, local media said, ahead of his planned visit to Seoul for a trilateral summit scheduled on November 1 with South Korea and China.

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Abe is also expected to hold his first official bilateral meeting with South Korean President Park Geun-Hye on the sidelines of the summit, Kyodo News and other reports said.

His visit to the war shrine would infuriate neighboring countries, especially China and South Korea, where the site is seen as a potent symbol of Japan’s lack of penitence over its aggression during the first half of the 20th century.

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The Yasukuni shrine honours Japan’s war dead, including some senior military and political figures convicted of serious crimes in the wake of the country’s World War II defeat.

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The accompanying museum also paints Japan as a frustrated liberator of Asia and victim of the war.

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Abe and other nationalists say the Yasukuni shrine is merely a place to remember fallen soldiers and compare it with Arlington National Cemetery in the United States.

But Abe’s pilgrimage to the shrine in December 2013 sparked fury in Asia and earned him a diplomatic slap on the wrist from the United States, which said it was “disappointed.”

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Scores of conservative lawmakers, possibly including cabinet ministers, are expected to go to the shrine to mark the autumn festival on Tuesday.

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Why Japan Can’t Come to Terms with its Past

TAGS: China, Diplomacy, Japan, Politics, s. korea, shrine

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