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Japanese leader blames inadequate police protection for Shinzo Abe’s assassination

Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida delivers a speech at his official residence in Tokyo on Thursday.
(Zhang Xiaoyu / Pool Photo)
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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Thursday blamed inadequate police protection for the death of former leader Shinzo Abe, who was shot last week while giving an outdoor campaign speech.

Abe, one of Japan’s most influential politicians, was assassinated Friday in western Japan, shocking a nation known for its low crime rate. Photos and videos of the shooting show that the gunman was able to come close to Abe from behind, while security guards were focused on the front.

“I think there were problems with the security measures,” Kishida said.

Officials at the National Public Safety Commission and National Police Agency are investigating what went wrong and will compile a list of measures in response, Kishida said.

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“I urge them to carry out a thorough inspection and fix what needs to be fixed, while also studying examples in other countries,” he said.

Kishida announced plans to hold a state funeral for Abe later this year, noting the former leader’s contributions at home and in boosting Japan’s security alliance with the U.S. Abe’s nationalistic views drove the governing party’s conservative policies.

Shinzo Abe was a political blueblood groomed for power, but his vision of a conservative and nationalistic Japan sparked both exultation and outrage.

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“By holding a state funeral in memory of former Prime Minister Abe, Japan will show its determination not to cave in to violence and to firmly defend democracy,” Kishida said. “Japan will also show to the world its determination to keep up its vigor and open a path toward the future.”

A smaller funeral was held at a temple in Tokyo on Tuesday.

A suspect was arrested immediately after Abe was shot and is being held for up to three weeks for questioning until prosecutors decide whether to press murder charges.

The suspect, 41-year-old Tetsuya Yamagami, reportedly told police that he abandoned a plan to shoot Abe a day earlier at a speech in another city because of a requirement that bags be checked at the entrance.

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The marks on a building near where the former prime minister was slain were apparently from the first shot fired by the gunman. The second was fatal.

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Police and media reports say Yamagami told investigators that he killed Abe because of rumored links between the former prime minister and a religious group Yamagami hated. Yamagami was reportedly upset because his mother made large donations to the Unification Church that bankrupted the family.

The assassination has shone a light on links between Abe and Kishida’s Liberal Democratic Party and the Unification Church, which is known for its conservative anti-communist beliefs and its mass weddings.

The Japanese branch of the South Korean-based church confirmed Monday that Yamagami’s mother was a member and that Abe was not. Abe has appeared in video messages to groups affiliated with the church.

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