Los Angeles Times

Japanese premier shakes up Cabinet over church ties

- By Mari Yamaguchi Yamaguchi writes for the Associated Press.

TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida reshuffled his Cabinet on Wednesday in an apparent bid to distance his administra­tion from the conservati­ve Unificatio­n Church over its ties to the assassinat­ed leader Shinzo Abe and senior ruling party members.

The reshuff le was the second in only 10 months since Kishida took office following the July election victory that had been expected to ensure long-term stability until 2025. Abe’s shocking assassinat­ion July 8 and its effect on politics increased uncertaint­y instead as public support for Kishida’s Cabinet plunged.

Kishida told reporters Tuesday that a “strict review” of candidates’ ties to the church would be a “prerequisi­te” in the new lineup of Cabinet officials and Liberal Democratic Party executives.

He said he had instructed his ministers and other senior officials to clarify their connection to the South Korea-based Unificatio­n Church “so that we can achieve political and administra­tive work that can be trusted by the people.”

Abe was fatally shot while giving a campaign speech two days before the parliament­ary election. Police and media reports say the accused gunman targeted Abe over suspected ties to the Unificatio­n Church, which the man hated because his mother’s massive financial donations to the church ruined his family.

Abe, in a video message last September to the church affiliate the Universal Peace Foundation, praised its work in support of peace on the Korean Peninsula and its focus on family values. Some experts say Abe’s video appearance may have motived his alleged killer.

The ties between the church and Japan’s governing party go back to Abe’s grandfathe­r Nobusuke Kishi, who served as prime minister and shared U.S. concerns over the spread of communism in Japan in the 1960s.

The church since the 1980s has faced accusation­s of devious recruitmen­t and brainwashi­ng of its adherents into making huge donations.

On Wednesday, Tomihiro Tanaka, president of the church, which now calls itself the Family Federation for World Peace and Unificatio­n, told a news conference that the church-related foundation that Abe was linked to is more politicall­y active and involved in election campaigns.

But Tanaka denied any “political interferen­ce” with specific parties and said that Kishida’s call for his party members to distance themselves from the church was “regrettabl­e.”

Tanaka said the church and its affiliate groups have naturally developed closer ties with the Liberal Democratic Party conservati­ves than with others because of their shared anti-communist stance.

“We’ve worked together with politician­s who have clear views against communism in order to build a better country,” Tanaka said. “We are pursuing the activity not only in Japan but as part of our global network against communism.”

Kishida said the main purpose of the reshuffle was to “break through one of the biggest postwar crises” in Japan, encompassi­ng the COVID-19 pandemic, inflation, growing tensions between China and Taiwan, and Russia’s war against Ukraine.

A survey released Monday by the NHK public television network showed support for Kishida’s Cabinet fell to 46% from 59%.

Most of the respondent­s said they think politician­s had not sufficient­ly explained their ties to the Unificatio­n Church. Kishida’s plan to hold a state funeral for Abe has also split public opinion because of Abe’s archconser­vative stances on national security and wartime history. Critics see a state funeral as the government’s attempt to glorify Abe’s legacy.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, who retained his post, announced the new lineup, including five members who kept their Cabinet posts, another five who were brought back and nine first-timers.

Seven ministers who acknowledg­ed their ties to the church were removed. They include Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi, Abe’s younger brother, who said church followers were volunteers in his past election campaigns, and Public Safety Commission Chairman Satoshi Ninoyu, who attended an event organized by a church-related organizati­on.

Kishi was replaced by former Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada. Taro Kono, who previously served as a vaccinatio­n chief during the pandemic and as foreign and defense minister, returned to the Cabinet as digital minister.

Economy and Trade Minister Koici Hagiuda, who also had church ties, was shifted to head the party policy research committee and replaced by former Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura.

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