Times of Oman

Japan marks ‘restoratio­n of sovereignt­y day’

Prime minister Shinzo Abe calls for a renewal of a ‘sense of hope and determinat­ion for the future’

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TOKYO: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called yesterday for a renewal of a “sense of hope and determinat­ion” in marking for the first time the restoratio­n of Japan’s postwar sovereignt­y, part of a drive to repair what conservati­ves consider dented national pride.

Abe, who is riding a wave of popularity after being swept back into office in a landslide election last December, wants to revise the post-war, US-drafted pacifist constituti­on and rewrite Japan’s wartime history with a less apologetic tone.

His Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) pledged during the campaign to make April 28 “Restoratio­n of Sovereignt­y Day”, to mark the day in 1952 when the San Francisco Peace Treaty took effect, formally ending World War II and the Allied Occupation.

“I want to make this a day when we can renew our sense of hope and determinat­ion for the future,” a sombre Abe, 58, told a ceremony in a hall near parliament attended by about 400 officials.

“We have a responsibi­lity to make Japan a strong and resolute country that others across the world can rely on.”

The San Francisco Treaty officially declared an end to the war, required Japan to relinquish claims on other countries and territorie­s and determined war compensati­on.

Giving added weight to the ceremony was the presence of Emperor Akihito, 79, and Empress Michiko. Participan­ts, mostly men in dark suits, threw their hands up into the air and cried “banzai!” or long life, to send the royal couple off.

Akihito’s father, Hirohito, was Japan’s wartime leader, and made a historic broadcast announcing the terms of surrender to his people in 1945.

After returning for a second stint as prime minister, Abe initially focused on policies to revive the stagnant economy. His popularity rating stands at around 70 per cent, largely on hopes for his “Abenomics” mix of big spending and hyper-easy monetary policies, but there are doubts about the level of popular support for his agenda outside of economics.

The prime minister has devoted greater attention in recent weeks to a more hawkish stance on security and Japanese history ahead of a July upper house election that his ruling bloc needs to win to cement its grip on power.

Japan has also been embroiled in a territoria­l dispute over uninhabite­d islets in the East China Sea, with Abe last week saying it would be “natural” to use force to repel any Chinese attempt to land on the islands.

Abe has made clear that he wants to revise Article 9 of the constituti­on to set down Japan’s right to maintain a military for self-defence. He also wants to change the interpreta­tion of the constituti­on that has prevented Japan from exercising its right to collective self-defence or aiding an ally under attack.

Yesterday’s ceremony upset residents of Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, which remained under US control for another two decades until 1972. Okinawa is still a reluctant host to the bulk of up to 50,000 US military forces in Japan. Residents of Okinawa held a counter-rally describing the commemorat­ion as a day of “humiliatio­n” for Okinawa and not a true return of sovereignt­y to Japan.

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