Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Farm minister says 'long life' to Japan in suicide note

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Farm minister says 'long life' to Japan in suicide note

(AP)
Updated: 2007-05-30 13:33

TOKYO - Japan's farm minister wrote a suicide note wishing "banzai," or
long life, to his country and government before hanging himself earlier
this week, news reports said Wednesday.

Agriculture Minister Toshikatsu Matsuoka killed himself in his Tokyo
apartment Monday as he faced mounting accusations in a series of
political scandals that have rocked the government.

"I apologize with all my heart for causing all the fuss and trouble
because of my ignorance and lack of virtue," Kyodo News agency and
several newspapers quoted Matsuoka as writing.

"Banzai to Prime Minister Abe, and to the Japanese nation," he wrote in
the note, signed and dated May 28, Kyodo said.

"Banzai" is a traditional Japanese battle cry meaning "ten thousand
years." World War II soldiers typically cheered it in honor of the
emperor.

The Mainichi newspaper said Matsuoka, whose funeral was held Wednesday,
left a total of eight notes addressed to his staff or people he had
worked with.

The suicide was a major blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government
less than two months before he faces a major test in July elections for
the upper house of Japan's parliament.

The reports on the content of one of the suicide notes came just as
Matsuoka's private funeral was held in his home region of Kumamoto in
southwestern Japan.

The Agriculture Ministry offered a silent prayer at noon, when the
funeral was scheduled to start, a ministry official said on condition of
anonymity, citing usual practices.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki said at a news conference that
Abe was not attending, and that "the prime minister is extremely
disappointed" that he could not go. Abe's wife, Akie, is attending
instead.

Police refused to confirm details of the suicide notes. The Agriculture
Ministry said the notes could not be immediately confirmed, and phone
calls to his offices went unanswered.

Abe acknowledged late Tuesday that he had received one, and summarized
that in it Matsuoka had thanked him and discussed Japanese agricultural
policy.

Matsuoka, the first serving Cabinet member to kill himself since World
War II, also was accused of receiving illicit political donations from
contractors with the government-affiliated organization.

The day after his suicide, a former executive leapt to his death over a
big-rigging scam linked to Matsuoka, fueling a scandal threatening Abe's
beleaguered government.

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