The Borneo Post

Japan plans to have new emperor in 2019 — Media

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TOKYO: Japan is planning for Emperor Akihito to retire and be replaced by his eldest son on Jan 1, 2019, reports said Wednesday, as the country works on a legal framework for its first abdication in 200 years.

Akihito, 83, expressed a desire in August to abdicate after nearly three decades on the Chrysanthe­mum Throne, citing his advancing age and weakening health.

Major national newspapers – the Yomiuri, Asahi, Mainichi and Nikkei – cited unnamed sources as saying Crown Prince Naruhito, 56, would succeed his father on New Year’s Day 2019.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga declined to comment on the reports at his regular news conference on Wednesday.

After Akihito’s announceme­nt last year, the government establishe­d a panel of experts to help decide how best to proceed on an issue fraught with historical and legal challenges.

Though abdication­s have occurred in Japan’s long imperial history there has not been one for 200 years. Under current laws there is no legal mechanism for one.

The six-member panel has discussed various legal options, with speculatio­n rampant it will propose parliament pass a special one-time law to allow Akihito to step down.

The leading opposition Democratic Party, however, opposes a one-time change, arguing that this would not ensure stable future succession­s. It has advocated a revision to the permanent law that governs the imperial family.

Abdication is a highly sensitive issue in light of Japan’s modern history of war waged in the name of Akihito’s father Emperor Hirohito, who died in 1989.

Some scholars and politician­s worry that the abdication issue could open a can of worms and risk Japan’s monarchs becoming subject to political manipulati­on. Under the constituti­on they play only a symbolic role.

The panel plans to compile a summary of its views on the issue this month, a government official said.

Its firm proposals, however, will come no later than the end of March before the government submits legislatio­n to parliament, reports said.

As for the timing of the abdication, the Yomiuri said the panel considers that Jan 1, 2019 would be appropriat­e given he will have reigned for 30 years – something the emperor himself mentioned as a milestone year in his August speech. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo of Japanese Emperor Akihito (right) and Crown Prince Naruhito wave to well-wishers during a public appearance for New Year celebratio­ns at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo
File photo of Japanese Emperor Akihito (right) and Crown Prince Naruhito wave to well-wishers during a public appearance for New Year celebratio­ns at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo

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