The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan anti-nuclear governor quits over sex scandal

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TOKYO: An anti-nuclear Japanese governor stepped down yesterday after a magazine alleged he paid university students for sex, a resignatio­n that could boost the government’s plan to restart the country’s mothballed reactors.

Ryuichi Yoneyama was elected governor of Niigata prefecture in 2016 on a pledge to prevent the restarting of the Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa power station, the world’s biggest nuclear plant, about 200km northwest of Tokyo.

His unexpected victory, in which he narrowly beat a government­supported candidate, posed a challenge for the pro-nuclear policy of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Yoneyama, a 50-year-old unmarried doctor and lawyer, paid women in their 20s to have sex, according to the Shukan Bunshun weekly magazine.

“I decided to step down to avoid further turmoil and to take responsibi­lity for my actions,” he told reporters, bowing deeply in front of the cameras.

“It was hard to find someone to date ... I did give gifts and money to get attention” from the women, he said.

“I wasn’t able to tackle the nuclear issue, which I thought was a historic mission.” A 22-year-old student told the magazine he was “a good client.” Prostituti­on is illegal in Japan but prosecutio­n is rare. — AFP There are seven reactors across the 4.2-million-square metre Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa site.

The central government can overrule a governor’s opposition to restarting nuclear reactors.

But Abe has promised to win approval from local communitie­s before approving restarts under stricter post-Fukushima safety rules.

Dozens of reactors across Japan were switched off in the aftermath of the March 2011 Fukushima accident, the worst nuclear disaster in a generation, and there are seven currently operating.

The catastroph­e forced resource-poor Japan to turn to expensive fossil fuels to plug its energy gap.

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