Bangkok Post

Ex-PM’s aide denies favour for Abe friend

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TOKYO: A former aide to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday denied a media report that he had intervened to help win approval for a friend of the premier to set up a new veterinary school, the latest twist in suspected cronyism scandal.

Mr Abe’s support has been undermined by several scandals over suspected cronyism and cover-ups, raising doubts over how long he can stay in power and whether he can achieve his goal of revising Japan’s pacifist, post-war constituti­on.

His domestic troubles are mounting ahead of a summit with US President Donald Trump next week and an expected onslaught from Mr Trump over Japan’s trade policies.

In the latest bad news for Mr Abe, the Asahi newspaper reported yesterday that a former Abe aide, Tadao Yanase, had told local authoritie­s in 2015 that a plan by Mr Abe’s friend for a veterinary school in a government-designated deregulati­on zone was a “prime ministeria­l matter” and they should work hard to realise it.

Mr Abe has repeatedly denied he ever told officials to give preferenti­al treatment to his friend, Kotaro Kake, the director of school operator Kake Gakuen, who wanted to open the school — Japan’s first new veterinary school in more than 50 years.

Mr Yanase, now a senior official at the Ministry of Economic, Trade and Industry, said he had not met authoritie­s in Ehime prefecture or the city of Imabari, in the special economic zone, to discuss the project.

Economic zone status exempts some localities from national regulation­s, in this case, limits on the number of veterinary schools. Kake Gakuen got approval to open the school in Imabari.

“As I have stated in parliament, as the prime minister’s secretary, I met many people every day but as far as I recall, I did not meet people from Ehime prefecture or Imabari City,” Mr Yanase said in a statement.

“I did not have specific conversati­ons with outsiders that this matter was a prime ministeria­l matter.”

The Asahi newspaper cited a document it said appeared to have been prepared by Ehime officials. Ehime’s governor said the prefecture would look into the report, Kyodo news agency said.

The affair, which emerged last year, is one of several suspected cronyism scandals and cover-ups eroding Mr Abe’s support as he eyes a third term as ruling Liberal Democratic Party leader in a September vote. The scandals have led to opposition calls for Mr Abe to resign.

Victory in the party poll would set Mr Abe, who took office in 2012, on track to become Japan’s longest-serving premier.

Support for Mr Abe’s cabinet fell six points to 38% in a weekend survey by broadcaste­r NHK, while his disapprova­l rate rose seven points to 45%, topping his approval rate for the first time in half a year.

Mr Abe has also denied that he or his wife ever intervened in the sale of stateowned land to another school operator, Moritomo Gakuen, which had links to Mr Abe’s wife, Akie.

Doubts over the sale deepened on Monday when a finance ministry official said another official had proposed crafting a cover story with the school operator to justify the steeply discounted price.

Mr Abe’s government is also under fire after his defence ministry said the army last year found activity logs from a controvers­ial 2004-2006 deployment to Iraq, but did not tell his predecesso­r, who had told parliament they could not be found.

The logs could shed light on whether the deployment was to a “non-combat zone” as asserted by the government at the time, in line with constituti­onal limits on military operations overseas.

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