The Borneo Post

Draft of Abe’s WWII statement includes ‘apology’

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TOKYO: A draft of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s statement to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of World War II includes the word ‘apology’, public broadcaste­r NHK reported yesterday.

The closely-watched remarks — expected on Friday — will be heavily scrutinise­d by China and Korea, which dispute Tokyo’s version of its wartime history and who are waiting to see if Abe repeats earlier apologies for Japan’s militarism in the 20th century.

NHK said an original draft of Abe’s statement included the words ‘apology’ and ‘aggression’.

Those words appear in a landmark 1995 statement by then premier Tomiichi Murayama, who expressed ‘deep remorse’ and a ‘heartfelt apology’ over Japan’s actions. The so- called Murayama Statement said Japan ‘ through its colonial rule and aggression, caused tremendous damage and suffering to the people of many countries, particular­ly to those of Asian nations’. Also Monday, the right-leaning Sankei newspaper said Abe was likely to use the word ‘aggression’, though not necessaril­y linking it to Japan’s warring.

“It is likely that he will touch on (aggression) as a universall­y unforgivab­le act,” the paper said.

Abe’s statement is expected a day before Aug 15, the date Japan surrendere­d to the Allies in 1945.

The nationalis­t premier — who has been criticised by some for watering down Japan’s past and trying to expand the role of Japan’s military — said last week he would express ‘remorse’ over the war.

He added that he would follow previous explicit prime ministeria­l apologies over the country’s past ‘as a whole’. But Abe has repeatedly talked of the need for what he calls a ‘ forwardloo­king attitude’ that concentrat­es on the positive role Japan has played — and continues to play — in Asia since its surrender in 1945.

 ??  ?? Abe answers a question by an opposition lawmaker during an Upper House budget committee session at the National Diet in Tokyo.
Abe answers a question by an opposition lawmaker during an Upper House budget committee session at the National Diet in Tokyo.

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