Global Times

Abe link to school scandal bared

Education ministry discovery helps opposition suspicion

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Japan’s education ministry on Thursday had found documents that could back up opposition parties’ suspicion that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe used his influence to unfairly help a friend set up a business.

Abe has repeatedly denied abusing his authority to benefit his friend and his grip on power is not in danger. But the affair has chipped away at Abe’s support, according to opinion polls, and it looks unlikely to fade away.

“I am taking this result seriously,” Education Minister Hirokazu Matsuno told a news conference, referring to the unearthing of the documents dur- ing a second investigat­ion, after an initial one found nothing.

The Asahi newspaper reported last month that it had obtained documents showing that the Cabinet Office had told the education ministry that Abe wanted a new veterinary school run by a friend to be approved.

The report led to opposition questions about the process by which the government decided to allow a veterinary department to be set up in a state special economic zone, since the government has not approved such department­s in decades because of concern about a glut of veterinari­ans.

Opposition politician­s and the media have identified Abe’s friend as Kotaro Kake, the director of the Kake Educationa­l Institutio­n, which wants to open the veterinary department.

An official at the institutio­n declined to make immediate comment on Thursday, and Kake was not available for comment.

The Kake Educationa­l Institutio­n issued a statement last month saying it was following the procedure necessary to set up a veterinary department and it abided by the law.

Abe told parliament that being a friend of the school operator did not mean he had helped the institutio­n get permission to open a new school.

The affair is Japan’s second political controvers­y linked to a school in recent months. In the other case, an educationa­l group with ties to Abe’s wife got what critics said was a favorable land deal to build a school.

A voter survey by public broadcaste­r NHK showed on Monday that 48 percent of those polled said they supported the Abe government, down three percentage points from a month ago, while the disapprova­l rating for the government rose six percentage points to 36 percent.

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