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Japan PM Abe resigning after chronic illness resurfaces

- By Mari Yamaguchi

— Japan’s longest-serving prime minister, Shinzo Abe, said Friday he is stepping down because a chronic health problem has resurfaced.

Abe has had ulcerative colitis since he was a teenager and has said the condition was controlled with treatment. Concerns about his health began this summer and grew this month when he visited a Tokyo hospital two weeks in a row for unspecifie­d health checkups.

Abe said he is on a new treatment that requires IV injections. While there is some improvemen­t, there is no guarantee it will cure his condition and so he decided to step down after treatment Monday, he said.

“It is gut wrenching to have to leave my job before accomplish­ing my goals,” Abe said Friday, mentioning his failure to resolve the issue of Japanese abducted years ago by North Korea, a territoria­l dispute with RusTOKYO sia and a revision of Japan’s war-renouncing constituti­on.

He said his health problem was under control until earlier this year but was found to have worsened in June when he had an annual checkup.

“Faced with the illness and treatment, as well as the pain of lacking physical strength I decided I should not stay on as prime minister when I’m no longer capable of living up to the people’s expectatio­ns with confidence,” Abe said at a news conference.

In a country once known for short-tenured prime ministers, the departure marks the end of an unusual era of stability that saw the Japanese leader strike up strong ties with President Donald Trump even as Abe’s ultra-nationalis­m riled the Koreas and China. While he pulled Japan out of recession, the economy has been battered anew by the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Abe has failed to achieve his cherished goal of formally rewriting the U.S.drafted

pacifist constituti­on because of poor public support.

Abe, whose term ends in September 2021, is expected to stay on until a new party leader is elected and formally approved by the parliament, a process which is expected to take several weeks.

Abe became Japan’s youngest prime minister in 2006, at age 52, but his overly nationalis­tic first stint abruptly ended a year later because of his health. He returned to power in 2012.

 ?? FRANCK ROBICHON/GETTY ?? Shinzo Abe began his second stint as prime minister of Japan in 2012.
FRANCK ROBICHON/GETTY Shinzo Abe began his second stint as prime minister of Japan in 2012.

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