China Daily (Hong Kong)

Peace-loving public might be Abe’s greatest challenge

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But while Abe plans to forge ahead with parliament­ary debate on the issue and use his ruling bloc’s majority to pave the way for the legislatio­n to be passed, a peace-loving public might prove to be a monumental stumbling block.

“The Constituti­on is part of our national identity and since the end of the war Japan has been a peaceful country and has consistent­ly spread this message to the world,” said Arisa Nagai, a student at Chou University’s faculty of law.

“The younger generation­s will inherit whatever fundamenta­l changes occur in Japan and as the country has enjoyed peace for the past seven decades, I don’t see the need to change the Constituti­on.”

The 27-year-old added that the majority of her peers and professors felt the same way and would oppose the move.

Opposition parties, civic groups, legal experts, scholars, political watchers and individual­s, spanning the length and breadth of the country have resounding­ly called for Article 9 of the Constituti­on to be upheld in recent days.

Article 9 states: “The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling internatio­nal disputes.

“Land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained. The right of belligeren­cy of the state will not be recognized.”

Those words have ensured Japan’s forces maintained only a defensive posture, but a reinterpre­tation by the government saw the forces’ operationa­l scope widened to the point that now certain activities that are not wholly defensive in nature may be deemed unconstitu­tional.

“The browbeatin­g in Parliament to force the (security) legislatio­n into law was one thing, but fundamenta­lly changing the nation’s charter for the first time ever, would be a completely different propositio­n,” said Koichi Ishikawa, a researcher at Tokyo’s Internatio­nal Christian University.

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 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors to Moscow’s Red Square take photos of jets flying over the Kremlin on Thursday during a rehearsal for Russia’s May 9 Victory Day military parade to mark the 72nd anniversar­y of winning World War II.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors to Moscow’s Red Square take photos of jets flying over the Kremlin on Thursday during a rehearsal for Russia’s May 9 Victory Day military parade to mark the 72nd anniversar­y of winning World War II.

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