Japan to spend US$12 million on ex-PM Abe’s state funeral


Police officers stand watch as protesters rally against the holding of a state funeral for Shinzo Abe at the parliament buildings in Tokyo, Japan, August 31, 2022. Japan expects to spend around ¥1.7 billion on a state funeral for the assassinated former prime minister. – EPA pic, September 6, 2022.

JAPAN expects to spend around ¥1.7 billion (RM53.9 million) on a state funeral for assassinated former prime minister Shinzo Abe, the government said today, despite controversy over the plan.

Abe was shot dead on the campaign trail in July, and the government expects dozens of current and former heads of state to pay condolences at the September 27 service in Tokyo.

But recent polls show about half of Japanese voters oppose the publicly funded event that will cost some US$12 million.

Security is expected to cost around ¥800 million, with another ¥600 million to be spent on hosting and ¥250 million for the ceremony, top government spokesman Hirozaku Matsuno said today.

“Delegates from more than 190 foreign (countries and regions) will likely participate,” he told reporters at a regular briefing.

The funeral will be held at Tokyo’s Nippon Budokan, a venue used for concerts and sports events that also hosted Japan’s last state funeral for a former prime minister in 1967.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said the domestic and international accomplishments of Abe, the country’s longest-serving prime minister, make a state ceremony appropriate.

But state funerals for former politicians are rare in Japan, and a weekend poll published yesterday by the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper found that 56% of voters oppose the event, against 38% in favour.

Other recent polls have shown similar levels of opposition, and Kishida has said he is ready to answer questions on the issue in parliament.

His government’s approval ratings have taken a hit in recent weeks, in part due to the funeral decision.

Some opponents are against spending public money on an event honouring a politician, while others think a state funeral effectively forces public mourning or minimises Abe’s nationalist views and alleged links to cronyism.

Abe’s accused killer, Tetsuya Yamagami, who is in custody, targeted the former leader believing he was linked to the Unification Church.

Yamagami’s mother reportedly made large donations to the church, which her son blamed for the family’s financial difficulties.

A small private funeral for Abe was held at a temple in Tokyo shortly after his death, with thousands of people gathering outside to lay flowers and offer respects. – AFP, September 6, 2022.


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