Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

September 02, 2008

Controversial hardliner set to replace Japanese PM

Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Taro Aso

Image via Wikipedia


guardian.co.uk
Taro Aso, one of the most controversial figures in Japanese politics, has emerged as the favourite to replace Yasuo Fukuda, less than 24 hours after the prime minister announced his surprise resignation.
While Aso stopped short of officially announcing his candidacy, the 67-year-old hawk made no secret of his ambitions.
"Mr Fukuda said last night that he wanted a successor to take over what he has done," he told reporters today. "I believe I am qualified to take over [his] agenda."
[..]While Fukuda was criticised for lacking charisma, Aso has stoked controversy with a succession of ill-judged outbursts, often directed at Japan's former wartime victims.
In 2003 he upset Koreans when he praised Japan's often brutal colonisation of the Korean peninsula from 1910-1945; last year he suggested that US diplomats in the Middle East would never be trusted to solve the region's problems because they had "blue eyes and blond hair".
As economics minister, he said he wanted to turn Japan into a country where "rich Jews" would want to live.
During the second world war, his father's mining company used Allied POWs as slave labourers. Aso joined the firm in 1966 and was president for most of the 1970s, but has refused to apologise for its past use of forced labour.
He did apologise, however, for an ill-judged remark about Alzheimer's sufferers, but created uproar again last month when he likened the opposition to the Nazis because of their obstructionist tactics in parliament.
He wants class-A war criminals "delisted" from Yasukuni, a shrine in Tokyo that honours Japan's war dead, thereby removing the biggest obstacle to members of the imperial family resuming their annual visits.
Aso's privileged background, and charges that he is out of touch with ordinary Japanese, may explain his gaffe-strewn past.
[..]Aso's hard-line stance against China and North Korea has secured him bete-noire status among Japan's neighbours, but his conservative populism plays well at home. A poll published yesterday put his personal approval rating at 26%, well ahead of Fukuda (5%) and Ichiro Ozawa, the leader of the biggest opposition party, the Democratic party of Japan (DPJ) on 8%.
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