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Ex-Japan PM Abe apologises and corrects parliament statements over funding scandal
Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe gestures while attending the lower house parliamentary session to face questioning over a possible violation of election funding laws, in Tokyo December 25, 2020. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

TOKYO, Dec 25 — Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe today corrected statements he had made in parliament, apologising for what he said were mistakes regarding a political funding scandal that has also cast a pall over the current premier.

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Abe said he felt deeply responsible for making repeated false denials that his political funding group had subsidised cherry blossom viewing parties for his supporters, in possible violation of the country's strict political funding laws.

Japan's longest-serving leader said he had known nothing about the payments and pledged to work to regain public trust. The apology came after his secretary was yesterday summarily indicted over the issue and fined one million yen (RM39,222).

"Even though the accounting procedures happened without my knowledge, I feel morally responsible for what happened,” Abe told a parliamentary committee. "I reflect on this deeply and apologise from my heart to the citizens and to all lawmakers.”

Abe also filed corrected political funding reports for the last three years.

The public apology marks a sharp reversal of fortune for Abe, a political blue-blood whose grandfather and great-uncle also served as premiers. He quit as prime minister on health grounds in September after serving nearly eight years as prime minister.

The scandal threatens to damage his successor, Yoshihide Suga, who was Abe's right-hand man throughout his term and has defended his former boss in parliament.

Suga, who has been beset by other controversies and seen his support ratings slide less than a year before the next lower house election must be called, has apologised for making inaccurate statements.

Abe did not respond to questions from opposition MPs about whether he would take political responsibility for the scandal by resigning as an MP. He struggled to explain why he was able to file detailed updated funding reports even though he says his office does not have the underlying receipts for the parties.

Abe's statements to parliament from the end of 2019 contradicted the findings of the prosecutors at least 118 times, several domestic media reported, citing a parliamentary research bureau. — Reuter

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