The Borneo Post

Japanese minister resigns over earthquake gaffe

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TOKYO: Japan’s gaffe-prone disaster reconstruc­tion minister resigned yesterday after remarking it was lucky the catastroph­ic 2011 earthquake­tsunami had hit a largely rural region rather than Tokyo.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was forced to apologise to residents of the devastated northeaste­rn region of Tohoku, which is still recovering more than six years on, after Masahiro Imamura sparked outrage with his comments.

“It was good that it (the disaster) occurred over there in Tohoku,” he said late Tuesday.

“If it had been close to the capital zone, there would have been enormous damage,” he added, referring to the vast Tokyo conurbatio­n.

A massive undersea quake on March 11, 2011 sent a tsunami barrelling into Japan’s northeaste­rn coast, leaving more than 18,500 people dead or missing and sending three reactors into meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

After submitting his resignatio­n, Imamura said he deeply regretted the comments.

“I caused great trouble to the people of Tohoku and hurt their feelings. I’m very sorry,” he told reporters, bowing.

Abe, who was attending the same political gathering on Tuesday, apologised to guests soon after Imamura’s remarks, saying they were “extremely inappropri­ate”.

Imamura’s words “hurt the feelings of people in the disasterhi­t areas”, a grim-faced Abe said yesterday in further comments on the incident.

“As prime minister, I’d like to apologise deeply to the people in the disaster-hit areas,” he said.

Abe said he will replace Imamura with Fukushima native and veteran politician Masayoshi Yoshino.

It was not the first time Imamura has courted controvers­y.

He came under fire earlier this month after he said people who had not yet returned to areas of Fukushima recognised by the government as safe to live in are “responsibl­e for themselves.”

He then attempted to oust the journalist whose question led to the remarks at a news conference, shouting: “Get out!”

Abe’s approval rating, although still above 50 per cent, has recently fallen, as scandals erode public confidence in a government now in its fifth year.

A vice economy minister resigned last week after a magazine reported on an extramarit­al affair.

That came just weeks after the resignatio­n of Shunsuke Mutai, a vice minister for reconstruc­tion, who had joked last month the “(rubber) boot industry made money” following a deadly typhoon which claimed 19 lives in the northern town of Iwaizumi last year.

Abe took power in December 2012 vowing to end years of on-and- off deflation and revitalise the world’s third-largest economy. — AFP

 ??  ?? Masahiro Imamura
Masahiro Imamura

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