Gulf Today

Japan PM Abe sends offering to war shrine

Kyodo News and other reports says Abe would not visit the shrine during the festival to avoid creating tension as he plans to host a meeting with Li Keqiang and Moon Jae-in in early May

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TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent a ritual offering to the controvers­ial Yasukuni Shrine on Saturday but has no plans to visit it to avoid tensions ahead of a three-way meeting with China and South Korea, oficials and local media said.

Abe sent a sacred “masakaki” tree bearing his name to the shrine as it started a three-day spring festival, a shrine spokeswoma­n said.

On the eve of the festival, more than 70 lawmakers made a pilgrimage to the shrine, which China and South Korea see as a symbol of Tokyo’s past aggression.

Kyodo News and other reports said Abe would not visit the shrine during the festival to avoid creating tension as he plans to host a trilateral meeting with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and South Korean President Moon Jae-in in early May.

The conservati­ve premier, who has been criticised for what some see as a revisionis­t attitude to Japan’s wartime record, has sent ritual offerings to mark the shrine’s key events, including its commemorat­ion of the end of World War II.

The shrine honours millions of Japanese war dead, but also senior military and political figures convicted of war crimes after World War II.

The site has for decades been a lashpoint for criticism by countries that suffered from Japan’s colonialis­m and aggression in the irst half of the 20th century.

Abe visited in December 2013 to mark his first year in power, a move that sparked fury in Beijing and Seoul and earned a diplomatic rebuke from close ally the United States, which said it was “disappoint­ed” by the action. He has since refrained from going.

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

Tokyo is also seeking warmer ties with Beijing and Seoul, key countries in dealing with the unpredicta­ble North Korean regime.

Abe’s offering and the lawmakers’ visit came as North Korea said it will cease its nuclear and military tests and ahead of planned summits between the two Koreas next week and North Korea and the United States in late May or early June.

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Shinzo Abe

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