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A sex scandal from the distant past threatens Japanese prime
minister Mori
By James Conachy
12 September 2000
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this version to print
A sex scandal dating back 42 years is emerging as a serious
threat to the political career of Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro
Mori.
Prior to the lower house elections in June, Uwasano Shinso,
a monthly muckraking magazine, published the claims of a former
police officer that in 1958 Mori, then a 20-year-old university
student, had been arrested in a Tokyo brothel. According to the
magazine, Mori was released without formal charges or a court
appearance.
Mori denied the claims and sued the magazine, demanding a public
apology and $US100,000 in compensation. Even if true, the magazine
would normally have had difficulty backing up its allegations.
In cases where no conviction is registered, the police are not
obliged to produce their records.
But on August 22, events took an unexpected turn. The Tokyo
District Court accepted the argument of the magazine's lawyers
that if the Prime Minister had lied about his criminal record
it was a matter of public interest. Overruling objections by Mori's
lawyers, the court commissioned an agent to hunt through the official
archive of the Tokyo Police for the arrest charts for the date
of the alleged crimeFebruary 17, 1958.
Michio Sako, a legislator in Japan's upper house and a former
public prosecutor, commented in last week's Japan Weekly Post:
If he [Mori] filed a lawsuit and it turns out that he was
in fact arrested... he will be in deep trouble. It will be a fraudulent
claim deceiving the court and attempting to earn some money from
the trial. The Police Department must do their work to clarify
the issue, accepting the court's decision and checking their records.
The claims may be false, the records may no longer exist or
the police may refuse to cooperate with the court on the grounds
of protecting Mori's privacy. But at this point, the future of
the prime minister hangs in the balance. If he is proven to have
lied when the court reconvenes on October 3, demands for his resignation
are likely to be overwhelming.
Mori only became prime minister in April, following the unexpected
and ultimately fatal stroke suffered by his predecessor Keizo
Obuchi. Under Obuchi, Mori was a loyal member of his dominant
faction within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and held
the post of LDP General Secretary. He was quickly installed as
a stopgap leader by the Obuchi faction bosses to prevent a bitter
factional brawl inside the party before the lower house elections.
Under Mori's leadership, the LDP went to the polls in June
pledging to continue the high budget deficit spending policy carried
out under the two-year Obuchi administration. Ostensibly aimed
at bringing about Japan's economic recovery from the 1990-91 collapse
of the stock and property markets, and the subsequent effects
of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, the high levels of government
borrowing have driven public sector debt to some $US6.3 trillion,
more than 130 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
The Japanese economy, however, is still stagnant and unemployment
is at historic highs. Much of the borrowing has been used to finance
massive public works programs, which have primarily assisted the
construction and real estate industry, retail firms and rural
regionsall areas with traditionally close ties to the LDP.
But the lack of jobs and growing economic insecurity among broad
layers of the population has produced widespread alienation from
the government.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) registered
definite gains in urban areas during the election, campaigning
for action to bring the budget under control and denouncing the
public works spending as cronyism. An attempt by Mori to win support
by invoking prewar Japanese nationalism through his comments on
the divine nature of the Japanese emperor and nation
backfired. His public approval rating plummetted to only 25 percent
and has barely improved since.
Since the election, it is widely accepted within the LDP that
Mori has to be dumped before next year's upper house poll. While
the LDP retained government, it lost majority control of the lower
house, winning only 233 of the 480 seats in the House of Representatives.
It is now dependent upon the 31 seats of the small business orientated
and Buddhist-based New Komeito Party to pass legislation.
Not expecting Mori's government to survive longer than six
months, the major party factions, including Mori's own faction,
did not propose leading figures for the cabinetwith the
exception of key ministries such as Foreign Affairs and Finance.
The libel case has unfolded in a climate of continuous recriminations
against Mori over economic policy, attacks on his cabinet and
open speculation as to who will replace him.
A government plan in July to bailout the bankrupt Sogo corporation
with public funds was condemned throughout the major media. The
politician centrally responsible for the proposal to save Sogo,
Financial Reconstruction Commission chairman Kimitaka Kuze, was
swamped with corruption charges and forced to resign.
Over the past fortnight, proposals within the LDP for a further
$US90 billion in spending on another supplementary budget and
public works program have been subjected to scathing criticism.
Its chief proponent, LDP factional boss Shizuka Kamei, was immediately
subjected to accusations of corruption in the Asahi Shimbun,
the same newspaper that led the attack on Kuze.
Yomiuri Shimbun, a conservative and generally pro-LDP
newspaper, commented on September 1: Whether the government
can put together a budget capable of turning this troubled nation
around is highly questionable.
The most significant criticisms came from within the LDP itself.
Koichi Kato, a leader of the LDP non-mainstream factions
and a contender to replace Mori, denounced the budget plans as
unrealistic. Kiichi Miyazawa, the elder figure in
the Kato faction and Mori's own Finance Minister, declared: The
time when we could pay any price to take measures against a slump
has passed. A large extra budget is not necessary.
Kato is an advocate of Thatcher-style economic deregulation
in Japan. He is also an opponent of the coalition with the New
Komeito Party and has made clear his preference for the opposition
Democratic Party. If Kato's small faction of 50 to 70 legislators
defected to the DPJ, it could possibly bring down the LDP government.
Factional jockeying is already underway for a leadership spill
at the annual vote on the LDP presidency, a post that traditionally
determines the prime ministership and is currently held by Mori.
The Obuchi faction, the largest in the LDP, has re-elected as
its leader Ryataro Hashimoto, who was prime minister from 1996
to 1998 before being forced out by Obuchi. According to the Yomiuri
Shimbun, Kato is now holding weekly meetings with Hashimoto
and other factional leaders.
The speculation over whether Kato, Hashimoto or another figure
will replace him produced an outburst from Mori in late August.
Before an audience of LDP legislators and businessmen, Mori complained:
I am not clinging to the job. The following day he
declared: Now is the time our LDP should be firmly united.
Those who are talking about the next Prime Minister should step
forward.
Yet the fact no date has been set for a vote on the LDP presidency
and no open challenge has been advanced, points to the inability
of the LDP factions to come to any agreement. Mori has been left
to stagger on because what is at stake is not only who holds the
top post but also the future direction of the government's economic
and social policy.
By ordering a review of the police files and adding credibility
to the magazine's allegations against Mori, the Tokyo District
Court is responding to powerful currents within the Japanese political
establishment that want the question settled and Mori out.
See Also:
How long will Japanese Prime
Minister Mori last?
[1 August 2000]
Japan's debt crisis hangs over
global economy
[14 July 2000]
Japanese election result sets
stage for political instability
[1 July 2000]
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