China Daily (Hong Kong)

Crown prince urges Japan to face up to past

- At a news Feng Wuyong, a Xinhua News Agency reporter in Tokyo, Feb 25 Robert Dujarric, director of the Institute of Contempora­ry Asian Studies at the Japan campus of Temple Uni- versity, Feb 23 Qu Limin, Foreign Affairs Office of Liaoning province, Feb 25

conference on Monday ahead of his 55th birthday, Japan’s Crown Prince Naruhito stressed the need to remember World War II “correctly”. Comments:

By highlighti­ng the significan­ce of facing up to history and abiding by the pacifist Constituti­on in Japan at the beginning of 2015, the year that marks the 70th anniversar­y of the end of World War II, both the current Emperor Akihito and his son Naruhito have made giant steps to demonstrat­e the royal family’s stance as much as they can.

Japan’s royal family very rarely wades into politics, but it is very hard to believe that this is not a planned and calculated comment that has been approved by the Imperial Household Agency. Clearly the agency believes Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is going too far and that it will be bad for the nation if he continues to take the line that Japan did nothing wrong in the early decades of the last century.

Taking a very different stance on Japan’s wartime atrocities compared with the country’s right-wing government is in the interests of the Japanese royal family. Emperor Hirohito, Naruhito’s grandfathe­r, should have been put on trial for waging wars worldwide, but he was neither removed nor held responsibl­e. Imagine the royal family agree to Japan’s pacifist Constituti­on being revised and then Tokyo is defeated in a war it provoked, they would surely be deprived of their imperial rights for good.

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