Japan's new environment minister admitted yesterday to mistakes
in past political fund reports, dealing yet another blow to Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, who has been plagued by a slew of scandals in
his Cabinet.
Both the farm minister and a junior minister resigned on Monday,
just over a week after Abe reshuffled his Cabinet in a bid to
revive his popularity following a crushing defeat for his ruling
coalition in July's upper house election.
Four ministers have quit since Abe took office last September,
mostly for irregularities in political fund reports, while another
committed suicide.
In the latest problem, Environment Minister Ichiro Kamoshita and
his political fund management group are under fire over an 8
million yen (US$69,000) discrepancy in records of loans from the
lawmaker to the group declared in fund reports in the 1990s.
"There have been mistakes and omissions in the records and I
want to apologize deeply to the public for the errors made by this
political group," Kamoshita told reporters.
Asked if he would resign, he said: "I want to do my best to
explain in a way that will be acceptable to the public."
He said he had been a newcomer to politics at the time the
errors were made.
Abe said there had been a mistake in the records but indicated
he had no plans to fire Kamoshita, Kyodo news agency reported. Abe,
52, has come under fire in the past for protecting ministers when
they become embroiled in scandals.
Later yesterday, Kyodo said Yoko Kamikawa, the state minister in
charge of gender equality, had filed corrections for errors similar
to what Kamoshita made.
Kamikawa had failed to report 9.68 million yen in loans to her
fund management unit in December 2000, 11.18 million yen in April
2004 and 7.98 million yen in February 2006, Kyodo said.
The string of scandals is likely to weigh on Abe's already
sagging support, which saw a slight rebound after he revamped the
Cabinet, and to heighten political uncertainty, which could hurt
financial markets.
Stock market players have said that if another minister were
forced to quit, foreign investors might turn away from the Japanese
market.
On Monday, the farm minister resigned over illegal dealings at a
farmers' group he headed, and a junior minister also quit for
fudging financial reports.
(China Daily September 6, 2007)