Gulf News

Japanese PM denies corruption allegation

Slipping popularity is encouragin­g rivals and casting doubt on Abe’s prospects of becoming longest-serving leader

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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his ratings sinking over a suspected cronyism scandal, yesterday said he had never instructed officials to give preferenti­al treatment to a long-time friend, adding that the latter had never sought favours.

The prime minister and his aides have repeatedly denied intervenin­g to help Kake Gakuen, an educationa­l institutio­n whose director, Kotaro Kake, is a friend of the prime minister, win approval for a veterinary school in a special economic zone.

Abe’s support has plunged below 30 per cent in some opinion polls, hit by the suspected scandal and a perception among many voters that his administra­tion is taking them for granted.

‘Never sought favours’

The slump is encouragin­g rivals and casting doubt on Abe’s prospects of becoming Japan’s longest-serving prime minister by winning a third three-year term when his current tenure ends in September 2018.

Abe told a special session of parliament’s lower house budget committee that it was not surprising the public had doubts, given that Kake had been his friend since they were students, but added that Kake had “never once” sought favours. “There was no request or lobbying regarding the establishm­ent of a new veterinary school,” Abe said.

Asked if he had intervened in the approval process, Abe said: “I have never issued instructio­ns regarding specific cases.” Abe also pledged to regain public trust by “producing results”, giving priority to the economy and diplomacy.

Adding to the headaches for Abe, an opposition-backed candidate on Sunday won a mayoral election for the northern city of Sendai.

That follows this month’s historic defeat for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in elections for the Tokyo assembly, a devastatin­g blow, since much of Abe’s clout stems from his record of stacking up poll victories for the party.

A July 22-23 Mainichi newspaper poll published on Sunday showed Abe’s support slipping 10 points to 26 per cent from a previous survey in June.

 ?? AFP ?? Shinzo Abe
AFP Shinzo Abe

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