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New Japanese minister steps down | New Japanese minister steps down |
(about 8 hours later) | |
Japanese Transport Minister Nariaki Nakayama has resigned, just four days after taking the job. | |
The resignation will be seen as a setback for new Prime Minister Taro Aso, who took office on Wednesday. | |
Mr Nakayama was criticised over a series of controversial remarks. He called Japan's largest teachers' union a "cancer" in the education system. | Mr Nakayama was criticised over a series of controversial remarks. He called Japan's largest teachers' union a "cancer" in the education system. |
He also angered Japan's indigenous Ainu people last week, when he described the country as ethnically homogeneous. | He also angered Japan's indigenous Ainu people last week, when he described the country as ethnically homogeneous. |
The remark was seen as particularly insensitive because Japanese parliament passed a landmark resolution in June recognising the Ainu as "an indigenous people with a distinct language, religion and culture". | |
Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura said the controversy of Mr Nakayama had been "damaging". | |
"We must show the people how hard the Aso government is working, and try to win back the public's confidence. That is all that we can do," he told a news conference. | |
'Birth machines' | |
Mr Nakayama is no stranger to controversy, having previously angered China by saying that reports of Japanese wartime atrocities, including the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, were exaggerated. | |
He joins a growing line of Japanese ministers who have risked their jobs by sharing unguarded opinions. | |
Mr Aso is under pressure to call a general election | |
Earlier this month, farm minister Seiichi Ota resigned after admitting that his ministry had known about a rice contamination scandal but that he had seen no need to make "too much of a fuss over it". | |
Fumio Kyuma resigned as defence minister in July 2007 after implying that the US atomic bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima in 1945 was inevitable. | |
And in January 2007, former health minister Hakuo Yanagisawa was sharply criticised for referring to women as "birth-giving machines" during discussions about Japan's low birth rate. | |
Mr Nakayama, a former minister for education, had said he would "stand at the forefront to destroy the Japan Teachers' Union, which is a cancer for Japanese education". | |
Defending his comments, he said he had "meant to stir the interest of the Japanese people that distorted education is now conducted in schools". | |
"If my remarks have made any impact on parliamentary proceedings, it would not be what I had intended," he said. | |
The union's secretary general said he was "flabbergasted" by the comments" and questioned Mr Nakayama's judgement. | |
Low support | |
Pressure is growing on Mr Aso to call a snap election in a effort to shore up his authority. | |
His Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has dominated Japanese politics for more than 50 years, but is now facing a resurgent opposition. | His Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has dominated Japanese politics for more than 50 years, but is now facing a resurgent opposition. |
The latest newspaper opinion polls show public support for Mr Aso at lower than 50% and the country is facing stormy economic conditions. | |
Last week, Japan announced its sharpest fall in economic output in almost seven years. | |
The last prime minister, Yasuo Fukuda, resigned earlier this month after less than a year in office, frustrated by the ability of the opposition-controlled upper house of parliament to stymie his legislative plans. |
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