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Japanese PM Koizumi steps down | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Japan's Premier Junichiro Koizumi has stepped down in readiness for a vote in parliament to choose his successor. | |
It is almost a foregone conclusion that the new prime minister will be former Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe. | |
Mr Abe won a landslide victory last week in the leadership election of the dominant Liberal Democratic Party. | |
One of his first challenges will be to repair ties with Japan's neighbours, in the wake of Mr Koizumi's annual visits to the controversial Yasukuni shrine. | |
Rich legacy | |
Junichiro Koizumi held the premiership for more than five years, and will be remembered for his economic reforms and his close relationship with US President George W Bush. | |
He came to power in 2001, promising to transform the country's political landscape. | |
He said he would destroy his own party - the LDP - if that was what was needed to push through much-needed reforms. | |
He tried to boost Japan's world presence, sending troops to Iraq and taking a firm line on North Korea. | |
The BBC correspondent in Tokyo, Chris Hogg, says that with his flowing locks - so admired by many Japanese women - the divorced and single Mr Koizumi offered the electorate a change from the grey men they had been used to. | |
He was unconventional, but more importantly straight-talking, our correspondent says. He knew how to communicate directly with the people, using slogans and sound bites they would understand. | |
Japan had not really seen this before, and analysts say his most important achievement may prove to be that he persuaded the country that economic reforms mattered. | |
But his annual visits to the Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo, where the country's war dead are honoured, angered Japan's neighbours. | But his annual visits to the Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo, where the country's war dead are honoured, angered Japan's neighbours. |
Improving relations with China and South Korea will be high on the agenda for his successor. | Improving relations with China and South Korea will be high on the agenda for his successor. |
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