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Monday, March 12, 2018, 18:01
'Documents altered' after scandal taint on Japan PM, wife
By Reuters
Monday, March 12, 2018, 18:01 By Reuters

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his wife Akie see off Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko as they leave for Vietnam from Tokyo's Haneda Airport on Feb 28, 2017. (KAZUHIRO NOGI / AFP)

TOKYO – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his close ally, Finance Minister Taro Aso, faced growing pressure on Monday over a suspected cover-up of a cronyism scandal that has dogged the premier for more than a year.

Copies of documents seen by Reuters showed that references to Abe, his wife and Aso were removed from finance ministry records of a sale of state-owned land to a school operator with ties to Abe's wife, Akie. 

It could shake confidence in the administration as a whole. I strongly feel responsibility as the head of administration.

Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister, Japan

Abe, now in his sixth year in office, has denied that he or his wife did favors for the school operator, Moritomo Gakuen, and has said he would resign if evidence was found that they had.

Excised references seen by Reuters did not appear to show that Abe or his wife intervened directly in the deal. 

ALSO READ: Suspected cronyism scandal pressures Abe, finance minister

 Suspicion of a cover-up could slash Abe's ratings and dash his hopes for a third term as leader of his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). Victory in the LDP September leadership vote would put him on track to become Japan's longest-serving premier. 

The doubts are also putting pressure on Aso to resign. 

"It could shake confidence in the administration as a whole. I strongly feel responsibility as the head of administration," Abe told reporters after the finance ministry reported on the altered documents.

"I apologize to all of the people."

Abe said he wanted Aso to make every effort to clarify all the facts and ensure such acts were not repeated. 

Aso told a separate news conference that several officials at his ministry's division in charge of the sale were involved in altering the documents to make them conform with testimony in parliament by the then-head of the division. 

"It has become clear that there was a cover-up and falsification," opposition Democratic Party leader Yuichiro Tamaki told reporters. He said Aso should resign and parliament hold hearings on the matter. 

The 77-year-old Aso, who doubles as deputy premier and whose backing is vital for Abe, apologized for his ministry's actions, but said that he had no intention of stepping down. 

READ MORE: Japan opp looks to pressure PM over school scandal

The risk for Aso and Abe, experts said, is that the suspected cover-up does more damage than the land sale itself. 

"The cover-up is now a bigger issue than the original incident," said Koichi Nakano, a professor at Sophia University. 

A finance ministry official said that 14 items had been altered in the documents after February last year – when the scandal broke – at the instruction of the ministry's financial division to match testimony in parliament. 

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, right, and Finance Minister Taro Aso attend the plenary session of the Upper House in Tokyo, March 9, 2018. (TOSHIYUKI MATSUMOTO / KYODO NEWS VIA AP)

ASO'S SURVIVAL?

One such reference was to Akie's visit to the school at the heart of the suspected scandal. Also removed was a reference to ties by Abe and Aso to a conservative lobby group, Nippon Kaigi. 

A kindergarten run by Moritomo Gakuen taught a nationalist curriculum in line with views espoused by Nippon Kaigi. 

"At the very least, it seems that Aso's chances of surviving as finance minister are diminishing rapidly," wrote Tobias Harris, vice president of consultancy Teneo Intelligence, in an email. He said there was no "smoking gun" showing direct intervention by Abe or his wife. 

But Harris added: "It now seems to be more a question of whether Abe can manage an orderly exit at the end of his term in September or whether he'll resign hastily again - but I don't see how he can win a new mandate amidst the Abe fatigue that will surely grow after these revelations." 

On Friday, National Tax Agency chief Nobuhisa Sagawa abruptly resigned over his remarks in parliament about the case.

Sagawa headed the ministry division that submitted the documents before he was tapped as tax agency chief in July, an appointment critics saw as a reward for his efforts to diffuse the issue with his statements to parliament last year. 

Some LDP members said politicians should not pass the buck to bureaucrats. 

"It is inconceivable that the bureaucrats on the spot had such authority (to alter the documents)," media quoted Shigeru Ishiba, an LDP lawmaker who has made no secret of his desire to challenge Abe in the party race, as saying on the weekend. 

Abe, 63, swept back to power in December 2012 promising to revive the economy and bolster Japan's defense. It was a rare comeback for the conservative lawmaker, who quit abruptly in 2007 after a year in office marked by scandals in his cabinet, a deadlocked parliament and ill health. 

His ruling bloc won a two-thirds "super majority" in an October lower house poll, helped by opposition disarray. 

A March 9-11 survey by the Yomiuri newspaper showed support for Abe's cabinet has now fallen to 48 percent, down six points from a month earlier. Non-support rose to 42 percent and 80 percent said that the matter had not been handled appropriately.

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