Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday pushed through legislation in the lower house of parliament that could see troops sent to fight abroad for the first time since World War II, despite thousands of protesters overnight chanting and holding up placards reading: “No War, No Killing.”
A lower house panel approval on Wednesday of the unpopular bills, which would drop a ban on collective self-defense or fighting to defend a friendly nation such as the US, sparked a huge demonstration and more are planned.
The protest was reminiscent of those that toppled Abe’s grandfather 55 years ago after he rammed a revised US-Japan security pact through parliament.
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Crowds of protesters — organizers said 100,000 — gathered near parliament. Many stayed well into the night, chanting and holding up placards reading: “Abe, quit,” “No War, No Killing” and “Scrap the War Bills.”
Protesters were assembling again yesterday, although rainy weather could dampen the numbers.
The bills now go to the upper house and if no vote is taken after 60 days they will be returned to the lower house, where Abe’s coalition can enact them with a two-thirds majority.
Abe says a bolder security stance, welcomed by ally Washington, is essential to meet new challenges, such as those from a rising China.
“The security situation around Japan is getting tougher,” Abe told reporters after the vote, which was boycotted by the main opposition parties. “These bills are vital to protect Japanese lives and prevent war.”
The changes expand the scope for Japan’s military to also provide logistics support to friendly nations, relax limits on peace-keeping operations and make it easier to respond to “gray zone” incidents falling short of war.
Opponents say the revisions could entangle Japan in US-led conflicts around the globe and violate pacifist Article 9 of the US-drafted, post-World War II constitution.
“Opposition to the bill is growing louder,” said opposition Democratic Party leader Katsuya Okada just before the vote. “Prime Minister Abe, you should admit you have not obtained the people’s understanding and immediately withdraw the bills.”
The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the move called into question Japan’s post-war commitment to “the path of peaceful development,” and it urged Japan to learn the lessons of history.
Sino-Japanese ties have long been frayed by China’s memories of Japan’s wartime aggression, although relations have thawed since a leaders’ meeting in November last year.
Abe, who returned to office in 2012 pledging to bolster Japan’s defenses and reboot the economy, has seen his support slip to about 40 percent on voter doubts about the legislation and other policies, such as a plan to restart nuclear reactors.
A clash with the governor of Okinawa over a US Marines air base will likely flare up next month when Abe is set to make a controversial statement marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.
Some analysts have begun to draw parallels to Abe’s grandfather, former Japanese prime minister Nobusuke Kishi, a wartime Cabinet minister who was prime minister from 1957 to 1960 and resigned on July 15, 1960, because of a public furor over the US-Japan security pact.
Other analysts say that although Abe’s ratings would take a hit, he is likely to survive and win re-election in September for another three-year term as leader of his Liberal Democratic Party, given weak opposition inside and outside of the party.
“There is a lot of hubris and arrogance, and it will come back to haunt him. He is no longer the Teflon prime minister,” said Jeffrey Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University’s Japan campus.
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