Dozens of Japanese lawmakers including a Cabinet minister yesterday visited a Tokyo war shrine in a ritual sure to anger China and South Korea, where memories of Japan’s military and colonial record remain raw.
The capital’s Yasukuni Shrine commemorates millions of Japanese war dead, including several senior military and political figures convicted of war crimes after World War II, as well as 30,304 Taiwanese soldiers who died in the war.
The leafy central Tokyo shrine to Japan’s Shinto religion has for decades been a lightning rod for criticism by countries that suffered under Japan’s colonialism and aggression in the first half of the 20th century.
Visits to the shrine by senior Japanese politicians, including occasionally prime ministers, routinely draw an angry reaction from China and South Korea, which see it as a symbol of Tokyo’s militaristic past.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and other nationalists say the shrine is merely a place to remember fallen soldiers and compare it to burial grounds such as Arlington National Cemetery in the US.
At least 92 lawmakers visited Yasukuni for its annual spring festival, of whom 79 were from Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party, according to an official working for upper house of parliament member Toshiei Mizuochi.
Japanese Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications Sanae Takaichi visited the shrine, although separately from the other lawmakers, according to footage shown on public broadcaster NHK.
The figure this time compares with the more than 100 lawmakers and three ministers who visited during last year’s spring event. For the shrine’s autumn festival six months ago, 73 lawmakers and two ministers attended.
On Aug. 15 last year — the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II — two Cabinet ministers went to the shrine, along with about 60 lawmakers.
Abe’s wife, Akie, also visited Yasukuni in December last year.
Yesterday’s visit by the lawmakers came a day after Abe made a ritual offering to the shrine.
Abe went in December 2013 to mark his first year in power, a pilgrimage that sparked fury in Beijing and Seoul and earned him a diplomatic rebuke from the US, which said it was “disappointed” by the action.
He has since refrained from going, and reaction by China and South Korea to the latest visit by the parliamentarians is expected to be muted, as Japan has taken steps over the past 18 months or so to improve relations with both countries and Abe has held summit meetings with their leaders.
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