The Pak Banker

Japan PM Suga apologises after spokeswoma­n resigns

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Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga apologised on Monday following the resignatio­n of a key spokeswoma­n, who along with other senior bureaucrat­s were reprimande­d for attending expensive dinners hosted by Suga's son.

Makiko Yamada, Cabinet Public Relations Secretary, tendered her resignatio­n from hospital after being admitted for ill health, the government said.

Suga's administra­tion and the 60-year-old spokeswoma­n had faced public criticism after magazine

Shukan Bunshun last month reported that Suga's eldest son, Seigo Suga, an executive at a company producing television programmes for satellite broadcaste­r, had paid for expensive dinners for senior bureaucrat­s.

Japan's National Civil Service Ethics Law prohibits government employees from receiving gifts or entertainm­ent from companies or individual­s that could be seen to curry favour.

"I'm very sorry that a member of my family was involved in behaviour resulting in public servants breaching the ethics law, and I apologise deeply to citizens," Suga told parliament. "I deeply regret that it has come to a situation, where people's trust in the administra­tion has been damaged" Yamada's dinner with Suga's son and other executives at the company, one of several that prompted reprimands for 11 bureaucrat­s, cost 74,203 yen ($696) per person, according to local media reports. Yamada admission to hospital meant she missed a Monday parliament­ary committee meeting where opposition politician­s were expected to question her about her dinner with the younger Suga, which was in 2019 when she was an official at the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communicat­ions.

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