Japan PM sends offering to war shrine

April 21, 2014 09:44 am | Updated November 17, 2021 06:53 am IST - TOKYO

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe walks on his way to meet a delegation of US representatives at the premier's official residence in Tokyo on Monday.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe walks on his way to meet a delegation of US representatives at the premier's official residence in Tokyo on Monday.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent a religious offering Monday to a Tokyo shrine that honours the dead, including executed war criminals long a >source of tension with Japan’s neighbours China and South Korea.

Mr. Abe’s offering at the Yasukuni Shrine marks the April 21—23 spring festival, one of the shrine’s key annual events. But the move suggests he will not go to Yasukuni ahead of President Barack Obama’s visit beginning Wednesday.

Mr. Abe presented a pair of “masakaki,” traditional Shinto-style decorations of tree branches and other ornaments, along with a wooden plate carrying his name and title.

Two ministers of his Cabinet have prayed at Yasukuni recently the national public safety chief on Sunday and the interior minister the previous week ahead of the festival during which most pro-Yasukuni lawmakers visit. Dozens of lawmakers are set to visit the shrine Tuesday.

This year’s spring festival at Yasukuni partially overlaps with President Barack Obama’s trip to Japan, part of an Asian tour that also includes South Korea, the Philippines and Malaysia.

Late last month, Mr. Obama helped to bring together Abe and South Korean President Park Geun-hye for their first face-to-face meeting since they took office more than a year ago. The absence of such a meeting between the leaders of key U.S. allies in Asia was a deep concern for Washington.

Yasukui enshrines 2.5 million war dead including 14 Class A war criminals from World War II. The shrine has been a flashpoint between Japan and neighbuors China and both Koreas. They see Yasukuni as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism and repeated visits by Japanese leaders as a lack of remorse over wartime history.

Mr. Abe’s past remarks suggesting revisionist views about Japan’s wartime history, and his push to step up Japan’s national security and defence has prompted caution from the neighbours.

Conservative politicians who visit the shrine argue they are only making a pacifist pledge by praying for those who died in the war. Mr. Abe did not respond about his donations.

Mr. Abe regularly visited Yasukuni until he became prime minister, and has visited only once in December since taking office at the end of 2012. That visit has infuriated South Korea and China, worsening ties with already chilling ties with them over territorial and history issues. Washington said Mr. Abe’s visit was disappointing.

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