China Daily

Abe unveils plan to revise Constituti­on

Voters in Japan are deeply divided over campaign to revise Article 9

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TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Wednesday that he hopes to see a revised Constituti­on go into effect in 2020 under a plan that will see the first change to the postwar charter.

Speaking in a video message at a gathering to celebrate the he 70 th anniversar­y of the Pacifist Constituti­on being enacted, Abe said he wanted the language in the revised Constituti­on to mention Japan’s Self-Defense Forces.

The current charter makes no mention of the existence of the SDF in its war-renouncing pledges, which has led to a great deal of controvers­y regarding the constituti­onality of Abe and his ruling Liberal Democratic Party camp’s push to expand the scope of the nation’s forces.

“By making explicit the status of the SDF in the Constituti­on during our generation’s lifetime, we should leave no room for contending that the SDF may be unconstitu­tional,” the prime minister said.

In an upper house election held last July, Abe’s ruling coalition won a sweeping majority and along with conservati­ve and pro-revision forces, the ruling camp command a twothirds majority in both chambers necessary to call a national referendum on changing the constituti­on.

Article 9 of Japan’s Pacifist Constituti­on states that “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”.

It goes on to state: “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.”

Voters in Japan are deeply divided over Abe’s campaign to revise the Constituti­on, according to a poll released on Wednesday.

The Nikkei Inc/TV Tokyo survey showed about 46 percent of respondent­s favored keeping the Constituti­on as it is, four percentage points lower than a similar poll last year.

The number favoring a change stood at 45 percent, up five percentage points from a year ago.

Protection mission

Meanwhile, Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force Sazanami destroyer has joined the Izumo helicopter carrier in escorting a United States Navy vessel, sources said on Wednesday.

The Sazanami joined the mission having departed from a MSDF base in Kure on Tuesday, Kyodo News quoted government and other sources as saying.

Japan’s Ministry of Defense previously said the inaugural mission, since the contentiou­s new legislatio­n took effect last year, is aimed at a showing of Japanese force alongside that of the US.

The Izumo, the largest warship Japan has entered into service since World War II, and widely regarded as de facto aircraft carrier, left its base in Yokosuka on Monday for the mission.

The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation ... ” Article 9 of Japan’s Pacifist Constituti­on

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