Japan’s PM marks end of war but does not apologise for country’s aggression

15 August 2021, 13:14

Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito (right) and Empress Masako bow during a ceremony to mark the 76th anniversary of Japan’s surrender (Toru Hanai/Pool Photo via AP). Picture: PA

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga called for the tragedy of war never to be repeated but avoided apologising for his country’s role in the conflict.

Japan marked the 76th anniversary of its Second World War surrender on Sunday with a sombre ceremony in which Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga pledged for the tragedy of war to never be repeated but avoided apologising for his country’s aggression.

Suga said Japan never forgets that the peace the country enjoys today is built on the sacrifices of those who died in the war.

“We will commit to our pledge to never repeat the tragedy of the war,” he said in his first speech at the event since becoming prime minister.

Suga did not offer an apology to the Asian victims of Japanese aggression across the region in the first half of the 20th century — a precedent set by the country’s previous leader, Shinzo Abe, who was frequently accused of trying to whitewash Japan’s brutal past.

2,500,000
The number of Japanese who died during the Second World War
AP

In a largely domestic-focused speech, Suga listed damage inflicted on Japan and its people, including the US atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the firebombing of Tokyo and other cities and the fierce battle of Okinawa, and mourned for them.

Emperor Naruhito, in contrast, expressed “deep remorse” over his country’s wartime actions in a carefully nuanced speech that followed the footsteps of his father, who devoted his 30-year career to making amends for a war fought in the name of Hirohito, the current emperor’s grandfather.

Naruhito also said he hoped that people can put their hearts together to overcome the difficulty of the pandemic while seeking happiness and peace for all.

Amid Tokyo’s surging coronavirus infections, about 200 participants, reduced from about 6,000 before the pandemic, mourned for the dead with a minute’s silence. Masks were required, and there was no singing of the national anthem.

Yoshihide Suga
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga delivers a speech during a ceremony marking the 76th anniversary of Japan’s surrender in the Second World War (Toru Hanai/Pool Photo via AP)

Suga vowed to cooperate with the international community in tackling global issues under “proactive pacifism”, a vision that Abe promoted to allow Japan to play a greater military role in international conflicts.

Beginning in 2013, Abe stopped acknowledging Japan’s wartime hostilities or apologise in his Aug 15 speeches, scrapping a nearly 20-year tradition that began with the 1995 apology of Socialist leader Tomiichi Murayama.

On Sunday, before attending the ceremony at Tokyo’s Budokan hall, Suga laid flowers at a nearby national cemetery for unknown soldiers. While Suga stayed away from the controversial Yasukuni shrine, he did send a religious offering to the shrine, Japanese media reported.

Victims of Japanese actions during the first half of the 20th century, especially the Koreas and China, see the shrine as a symbol of Japanese militarism because it honours convicted war criminals among about 2.5 million war dead.

Abe, who stepped down as prime minister last year, prayed at the shrine on Sunday, and so did three other members of Suga’s Cabinet. Two other ministers visited the shrine on Friday.

The visits sparked criticism from China and South Korea.

On Sunday, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry urged Japanese officials to show “sincere remorse through action” so that the countries could develop “future-oriented ties”.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also said they had lodged “stern representations” with the Japanese side in Tokyo and in Beijing over the visits to the Yasukuni shrine, noting Suga’s religious offering.

Spokeswoman Hua Chunying called on Japan to take actions that would “win the trust” of its neighbours.

By Press Association

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