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Japanese ex-leader Miyazawa dies | Japanese ex-leader Miyazawa dies |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Former Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa has died at the age of 87, Japanese media has reported. | Former Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa has died at the age of 87, Japanese media has reported. |
A veteran lawmaker whose career spanned several decades, Mr Miyazawa served as prime minister from 1991 to 1993. | A veteran lawmaker whose career spanned several decades, Mr Miyazawa served as prime minister from 1991 to 1993. |
He was finance minister twice, in the late 1980s and again in the late 1990s as Japan struggled with recession. | |
He is also remembered as the world leader upon whom US President George Bush Snr was sick during a state dinner in Tokyo. | |
Mr Miyazawa died of natural causes at his home in Tokyo, an aide told the Associated Press. | |
Finance expert | |
A graduate of the elite Tokyo University, Mr Miyazawa served in the finance ministry before his election to parliament in 1953. | |
He rose through the ruling party ranks, holding several key cabinet posts including foreign minister and chief Cabinet secretary. | |
In 1986 he was named finance minister - a position from which he was later forced to resign over an influence-buying scandal. | |
He returned as prime minister three years later, in November 1991. | |
A fluent English speaker, Mr Miyazawa was a long-term advocate of better ties with the rest of Asia. | |
Under his administration, a law which allowed Japanese troops to take part in UN peacekeeping operations was passed - the first such move since the end of WWII. | |
But his term was cut short when ruling party rebels backed a no-confidence motion, triggering a snap election which briefly ousted the Liberal Democratic Party for the first time since its establishment in 1955. | |
In 1998, as Japan struggled with financial woes, Mr Miyazawa was brought back in as finance minister by Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, to turn around the country's stagnant economy. | |
He served until the election of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in April 2001 and then retired from parliament in 2003. | |
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki described him as "a very knowledgeable politician". | |
"He taught us a lot about his life as a witness of history," he said. |
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