The Star Malaysia

Abe hits back over scandal

Defiant Japan PM denies altering documents as popularity dips

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TOKYO: Japan’s embattled prime minister hit back at critics over a favouritis­m and cover-up scandal that has seen his popularity plunge and loosened his iron grip on power.

In a hotly awaited statement in parliament, Shinzo Abe denied he had ordered bureaucrat­s to alter documents relating to a controvers­ial land sale as he comes under mounting pressure over the affair.

“I have never ordered changes,” he said.

The scandal surrounds the 2016 sale of state-owned land to a nationalis­t operator of schools who claims ties to Abe and his wife Akie.

The sale was clinched at a price well below market value amid allegation­s that the high-level connection­s helped grease the deal.

The affair emerged early last year, but resurfaced after the revelation that finance ministry documents related to the sale had been changed.

Versions of the original and doctored documents made public by opposition lawmakers appeared to show passing references to Abe were deleted, along with several references to his wife Akie and Finance Minister Taro Aso.

Aso has blamed the alteration­s on “some staff members” at the ministry.

But Jiro Yamaguchi, a politics professor at Hosei University in Tokyo, said the public was “not at all convinced” by this explanatio­n.

“Why was the land sold at a discount price? Without any political pressure, this could never happen, and voters are angry about it,” said Yamaguchi.

The prime minister repeated an apology, saying he “keenly felt” his responsibi­lity over the scandal that has “shaken people’s confidence in government administra­tion.”

The affair is hitting Abe’s ratings hard, with a new poll in the Asahi Shimbun showing public support nosediving by 13 percentage points from the previous month to 31%.

The figure is the lowest approval rating for Abe in the poll since his return to power at the end of 2012.

Another survey suggested that for the first time since before a general election in October, more peo- ple disapprove­d of the cabinet’s performanc­e than approved.

The scandal is harming Abe’s hopes of winning re-election as head of his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in September, which would make him Japan’s longest-serving prime minister.

Political analyst Yamaguchi said that if support continues to tumble, LDP members might begin to feel Abe is a liability ahead of upper house elections next year. — AFP

 ??  ?? Nothing wrong: Abe (left) and Aso attending an upper house parliament­ary session in Tokyo. — Reuters
Nothing wrong: Abe (left) and Aso attending an upper house parliament­ary session in Tokyo. — Reuters

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