The Killing of Japan’s Former Leader
A
gunman shot
Shinzo Abe, Japan’s most influential Former Prime Minister, while he was
giving a speech at a campaign event in the city of Nara. Less than six hours
later, Abe, the longest-serving leader in Japan’s postwar history, was dead at
age 67.
The
stunning assassination rattled
Japan and its sense of identity as a peaceful country where violent crime
is rare.
The
police arrested a
suspect, Tetsuya Yamagami, 41, on a charge of
attempted murder. The police said the gunman used an improvised
firearm, and admitted that he had intended to kill Abe because he believed
the former prime minister had some association with a group against which the
gunman held “a grudge.” Here are live
updates.
Abe
was one of Asia’s most well-known and widely respected leaders and remained the
most recognizable Japanese politician even after leaving office. His death
comes as China seeks to extend its
influence, North Korea continues to test
weapons and the war in Ukraine disrupts the global economy.
The
assassination will overshadow
tomorrow’s elections for the Upper House of Parliament. Abe stepped
down in 2020 but has remained a power broker: He had been campaigning for
a junior politician from his party, the governing Liberal Democratic Party,
which was expected to sail to victory.
Details:
Abe
collapsed midspeech and was bleeding on the street,
shot in the neck, doctors said. Video from
the scene showed a man being tackled after the shooting. The gunman appeared
to be standing behind Abe when he shot from close range. Here’s
what happened.
Reaction:
Fumio Kishida, Japan’s current prime minister,
described Abe as a “towering politician who left behind enormous
accomplishments in various areas.” He called the assassination “an act of
cowardly barbarism.”
A
modernizer with staying power
Shinzo
Abe had sought to revive the
country’s stagnant economy and normalize its military. His tenure as
prime minister for nearly eight consecutive years was a remarkable feat of
longevity.
From
2012 to 2020, Abe helped pull Japan out of the so-called lost decades that
followed the bursting of a huge property bubble in the 1980s. In a program
known as Abenomics, he imposed measures that involved
cheap cash, government spending on stimulus projects and attempts at corporate
deregulation.
Abe
also sought to unfetter
Japan’s military after decades of post-World War II pacifism
and resisted calls for the country to more fully apologize for its wartime
atrocities.
One
significant move came in 2015, when he pushed through legislation that authorized
overseas combat missions alongside allied troops in the name of
“collective self-defense.” The move came after huge public protests and a
contentious battle with opposition politicians. But Abe failed in
his long-held dream of revising the war-renouncing clause of
Japan’s Constitution.
The
scion of a staunchly nationalist family of politicians, Abe deployed
considerable political skill to remain in a post known for its high turnover.
He held the post of prime minister from 2006 to 2007 before making his second,
long stint. In 2020, Abe resigned because of ill health during the pandemic, a
year before his term was set to end.
Early
life: Abe was born in Tokyo in 1954. His maternal grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, was accused of
war crimes but never tried; he served as prime minister from 1957 to 1960.
Abe’s political future seemed preordained: He studied political science at Seikei University in Tokyo and spent a year at the
University of Southern California, also studying political science.
Region: Abe’s nationalism became
a sore point with Japan’s neighbors. In seeking to revise the Constitution, Abe
angered China and South Korea, two victims of Japan’s 20th-century militarism. Under
his watch, Japan’s relations with South Korea fell to one of their lowest points, with the two countries arguing over how Japan should atone for
its historic brutalities.