The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Akihito urges Japan to build ‘sincere’ ties with world

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TOKYO: Japan’s Emperor Akihito, who will abdicate at the end of April in the first such event in two centuries, marked the 30th anniversar­y of his enthroneme­nt yesterday with a call for the country to open up and forge sincere ties with the world.

The 85-year-old monarch, who became a symbol of peace and reconcilia­tion after the death of his father Hirohito, in whose name Japan fought World War Two, also stressed the desire of his fellow Japanese for peace.

“I think that our island country...is being asked now to open up further to the outside in a globalised world, to establish its own position with wisdom and to build relations with other countries with sincerity,” Akihito said.

He will step down on April 30, to be succeeded the next day by Crown Prince Naruhito, 59.

Yesterday’s ceremony was attended by Empress Michiko, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and other dignitarie­s.

Japan’s ties with neighbouri­ng China and the two Koreas have long been plagued by the bitter wartime legacy and Tokyo’s 19101945 colonisati­on of the Korean peninsula.

Relations with Seoul, in particular, have been chilled by feuds over wartime memories and military squabbling.

The emperor, whose father was once considered a living god, is defined by the post-war constituti­on as a symbol of unity, without political power, but is widely respected.

Akihito, who has often spoken of the need to remember the horrors of war, recalled that after his father’s death in 1989, Michiko wrote a traditiona­l poem about peace that said, “The country is filled with the words of all the people hoping to build an era of peace together.”

Akihito added, “But even now, we cherish in our hearts the quiet but resolute words that came to us from throughout the land, saying, ‘We will build a peaceful Japan together with the Imperial Household.’”

Some experts see Akihito’s legacy under threat from Abe’s conservati­ve agenda, as the wartime generation dies out.

Abe recalled Akihito’s visits to battle sites to pray for peace, and overseas trips and visits to disaster-stricken regions.

“While engraving in our hearts the path walked by the emperor, in the midst of a turbulent internatio­nal situation, we are resolved to create a proud future for Japan that is bright and filled with hope,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Akihito and Michiko receive the greetings of Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako as part of the ceremony marking 30th anniversar­y of Akihito’s enthroneme­nt at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. — AFP photo
Akihito and Michiko receive the greetings of Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako as part of the ceremony marking 30th anniversar­y of Akihito’s enthroneme­nt at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. — AFP photo

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