Japan’s PM reverses policy – now favours nuclear energy
Japan’s new leader endorses nuclear plants
http://www.smh.com.au/world/japans-new-leader-endorses-nuclear-plants-20121231-2c306.html#ixzz2GkVdjSKQ
January 1, 2013 TOKYO — The newly elected prime minister of Japan,
Shinzo Abe, said Sunday that he would seek to build nuclear reactors,
reversing within a week in office a campaign pledge to move Japan away
from nuclear power.
The statement about the reactors came in Abe’s first televised
interview since taking office. During his five days as prime minister,
he had hinted that he would take a closer look at nuclear power.
“They will be completely different from those at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant,” he told the national TV network, TBS. Multiple
meltdowns at the plant after an earthquake last year forced more than
100,000 people to flee their homes.
“With public understanding, we will be building anew,” Abe said.
He did not specify where or when. Building nuclear power plants would
depart from the direction of the previous government of Yoshihiko
Noda, who had pledged to phase out nuclear power by 2040.
It also appeared to go against a campaign platform adopted by Abe’s
Liberal Democratic Party that aims “to establish an economy and
society that does not need to rely on nuclear power.” The platform
also said Japan would put the development of alternative energy
sources, like solar and wind, ahead of nuclear power, and made no
mention of new nuclear plants.
Though fervent antinuclear protests across the country have kept all
but two of Japan’s 50 reactors off line, Abe is betting that Japan’s
silent majority will condone a return to nuclear to help bolster the
economy.
Abe’s pro-business Liberal Democrats won a landslide victory in
parliamentary elections this month, campaigning on promises to take
bolder measures to kick-start Japan’s moribund economy. The nation’s
biggest business lobby, the Keidanren, has publicly urged the
government to restart the nation’s reactors.
Signaling what could be rocky relations with Tokyo’s neighbors, Abe,
who returned as a prime minister after a yearlong stint in 2006-7,
also hinted that he may replace apologies from 1993 and 1995 for
Japan’s having used women as sex slaves during World War II and for
past colonial rule and aggression in Asia.
In a separate interview with The Sankei Shimbun, a national daily, he
said his previous administration had found no evidence that the women
who served as sex slaves to Japan’s wartime military had, in fact,
been coerced. The Japanese government will seek to communicate that
view, the newspaper quoted Abe as saying.
A perceived lack of remorse by Japan for its colonial and wartime
history has been severely criticized, especially by South Korea and
China, which bore the brunt of Japan’s colonial aggressions.
Japan is already embroiled in territorial spats with the two nations,
heightening tensions over the past year.
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It’s truly very difficult in this active life to listen news on Television, thus I simply use web for that purpose, and take the latest news.