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Koizumi Cabinet E-mail Magazine No. 245 (August 3, 2006)
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[Lion Heart -- Message from Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi]
(Provisional Translation)
Remembering the war dead
Junichiro Koizumi here.
The long rainy season has finally ended and we are now in the
season in which the blue sky of midsummer spreads out before us.
This year, once again, I will be attending the annual Hiroshima
Peace Memorial Ceremony on August 6 and the annual Nagasaki Peace
Ceremony on August 9.
Since taking up the post of Prime Minister, I have always attended
these ceremonies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and I have expressed my
condolences to the people who became victims of the atomic bombs
with the thought that such tragedies must never again be repeated.
Also, each year on June 23, apart from in 2003 when I was unable to
visit due to the need to attend a meeting of the Budget Committee
of the House of Representatives, I have traveled to Okinawa and
attended the annual Memorial Service for All the Fallen in the
Battle of Okinawa.
In June 2005, almost 60 years after the end of the Second World War,
I visited Iwojima, where approximately 22,000 people on the
Japanese side and 6,800 on the United States (US) side died in the
early months of 1945, to attend the Memorial Service for the War
Dead in Iwojima and also laid a wreath at the Cenotaph for the
Officers and Soldiers of the United States. Through these actions,
I mourned the Japanese and US soldiers who died in the fierce
battle.
At the very first press conference that I held right after
I assumed the office of Prime Minister in April 2001, I made my
position clear that, "I believe that during the post-war period, in
order for Japan to develop peacefully, the most important thing has
been to reflect first on the War, from which has come the
realization that Japan must never again wage war. A policy for the
future of Japan of the utmost importance is how to encourage the
creation of a peaceful and respectable nation, through endeavors of
the people of Japan."
Japan has maintained peace since the end of the War without
participating in war even once, and without being involved in war
either. The present peace and prosperity of Japan are built on the
precious sacrifices made by people who lost their lives during the
War. I sincerely mourn the war dead with thoughts of respect and
gratitude.
In any country and at any time, I believe it is natural to mourn
the loss of those who died in war.
Article 19 of the Constitution of Japan says that, "Freedom of
thought and conscience shall not be violated." I think that
offering sincere condolences for those who died in war in whatever
style is a matter of individual freedom.
Since assuming the office of Prime Minister, I have visited
Yasukuni Shrine once a year for the express purpose of sincerely
mourning those who unwillingly lost their lives to the War.
I visit Yasukuni Shrine based on my own thoughts and do not force
anyone to do the same. Nor do I myself visit Yasukuni Shrine under
coercion.
I am aware that there are people within the mass media and among
those known as intellectuals who criticize my visits to Yasukuni
Shrine. I am also aware that some nations are critical of my visits
to Yasukuni Shrine.
As for the opinions of these mass media commentators and
intellectuals who criticize me, I cannot help but think that in
essence they add up to the contention that I should stop visiting
Yasukuni Shrine because China opposes such visits. Or in other
words, it is better not to do things that China does not like.
I wonder how these mass media commentators and intellectuals
perceive freedom of thought and conscience? Is it not a good thing
to express feelings of respect and gratitude to the war dead, or is
there something wrong with that?
I am an advocate of the friendship between Japan and China. At an
international conference held in Boao, China in April 2002, I made
clear my desire for even greater development of the friendly
relationship between Japan and China and for both nations to
prosper through exchanges in the following words. "Some see the
economic development of China as a threat. I do not. I believe that
its dynamic economic development presents challenges as well as a
good opportunity for Japan. I believe a rising economic tide and
expansion of the market in China will stimulate competition and
will prove to be a tremendous opportunity for the world economy as
a whole."
Actually, since I first assumed my responsibilities as Prime
Minister in 2001, the volume of trade between Japan and China has
more than doubled, and China has now overtaken the US to become
Japan's largest trading partner. Moreover, during the same period
the number of people traveling between Japan and China has
increased to approximately 1.5 times.
I am ready to meet the Chinese leadership at any time. However,
China takes the position that they would not conduct summit
meetings with Japan as long as I continue to visit Yasukuni Shrine,
putting a stop to our top-level meetings since April 2005 when
I met with President Hu Jintao in Indonesia.
I do not understand the logic of this. If I were to say that
I would not hold summit meetings because another country's ideas
were different from my own ideas or from Japanese ideas, would you
criticize the other party, or would you criticize me? Probably many
would criticize me.
Such a brutal war should never be repeated and, moreover, the peace
and prosperity of today's Japan is built upon the precious
sacrifices made by the war dead. These thoughts form one of my
starting points as a politician too. While keeping these thoughts
in mind, this year too, I will once again attend the remembrance
ceremonies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and I will also attend the
annual Memorial Ceremony for the War Dead on August 15.
* The title of this column "Lion Heart" is a reference to the Prime Minister's lion-like hairstyle and his unbending determination to advance structural reform.
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[What's New in Government Internet TV]
- Cool Japan
https://japan.kantei.go.jp/video-e/index_e.html
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[What's up around the Prime Minister]
- Comment by Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi on the Suspension of
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https://japan.kantei.go.jp/koizumispeech/2006/08/01comment_e.html
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https://japan.kantei.go.jp/koizumiphoto/2006/07/28hoppou_e.html
Prime Minister Koizumi received a courtesy call from the young
people descended from families who once lived in the Northern
Territories of Japan.
- The Presentation Ceremony of Certification of Plans for Special Zones for Structural Reform and Plans for Regional Revitalization (July 27, 2006)
https://japan.kantei.go.jp/koizumiphoto/2006/07/27kouzou_e.html
Prime Minister Koizumi said, "I expect that there will be more
and more people in the localities who have the resolve to change
the state or to advance structural reform ..."
- Outline of the "Hideyo Noguchi Prize for Africa" (July 26, 2006)
https://japan.kantei.go.jp/koizumispeech/2006/07/26gaiyou_e.html
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General Editor | : | Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi |
Chief Editor | : | Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Jinen Nagase |
Publication | : | Cabinet Public Relations Office 1-6-1 Nagata-cho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 100-8968, Japan |