Japanese Official Drops Idea of Dedications to War Criminals
TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's government has backed away from a proposal<br>to remove dedications to convicted war criminals from a<br>controversial shrine, officials said Wednesday.<br> <br>The proposal,
Wednesday, August 11th 1999, 12:00 am
By: News On 6
TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's government has backed away from a proposal to remove dedications to convicted war criminals from a controversial shrine, officials said Wednesday.
The proposal, floated by Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiromu Nonaka last week, apparently was meant to make it easier for government officials to visit the Yasukuni Shrine in central Tokyo.
Pacifists and Asian countries invaded by Japan during World War II have protested visits by government officials to the temple, which enshrines those killed in the war, including convicted war criminals like World War II Prime Minister Tojo Hideki.
The powerful Federation of New Religious Organizations of Japan said official visits violate the constitutional separation of church and state, and sent a protest letter to Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi on Tuesday.
The federation, comprised of 66 religious organizations, also objected to the proposal's provision to make the temple a nonprofit corporation. The group said such a status would dilute the temple's religious significance.
On Tuesday, Nonaka backtracked from the idea of changing the shrine's status, saying "the government is not in a position" to decide religious matters, the prime minister's office said.
Before and during World War II, Yasukuni was a bastion of the military government's adapted version of Japan's indigenous Shinto religion, which established the emperor as a deity.
Government officials often pray at the shrine -- dedicated to 2.6 million Japanese war dead -- to mark Tokyo's World War II surrender on Aug. 15, 1945.
(Copyright 1999 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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