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LEAD: Abe cautions Kyuma to watch his tongue following A-bomb remarks


(EDS: ADDING INFO)

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe warned Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma on Monday to be more careful with his words following weekend comments taken as justifying the U.S. atomic bombing of Japan in World War II.

''I hope the minister will continue to carry out his duties especially on the issue of nuclear disarmament after having reflected on his words and fully grasped the weight of such remarks,'' Abe told reporters, rejecting calls from the opposition that Kyuma be sacked.

Kyuma apologized for and retracted the remarks Sunday.

After being summoned by Abe to the prime minister's official residence Monday morning, Kyuma indicated to reporters he has no intention of resigning despite pressure from the opposition.

''I told (the minister) that Japan is the world's only country to have suffered from atomic bombs and that we must always stand from the viewpoint of the A-bomb sufferers in Nagasaki and Hiroshima and consider their feelings,'' Abe told reporters separately. ''I cautioned him to take care not to make remarks that will cause misunderstanding.''

In a regular news conference earlier in the morning, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki said, ''With the premier's stern warning, I believe we can have (Kyuma) continue his duties as a minister.''

Despite such moves in Tokyo, protests over the remarks continued in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, with Nagasaki Mayor Tomihisa Taue saying he will protest directly to Abe and Kyuma as early as Tuesday in Tokyo.

The defense minister ''lacks consideration for the A-bombing survivors and Nagasaki citizens,'' Taue told reporters in Nagasaki, while suggesting he may reject Kyuma's attendance at the Aug. 9 memorial service.

The Nagasaki city assembly on Monday unanimously adopted a statement which says Kyuma ''disrespects the feelings of the A-bombing survivors and his remarks are unforgivable.''

Atomic bombing survivors, peace campaigners and labor union members in Nagasaki, meanwhile, staged sit-in in the peace memorial park there, and some 100 people gathered in front of the cenotaph for victims of the bombing in Hiroshima, seeking Kyuma's dismissal.

In Tokyo, Social Democratic Party leader Mizuho Fukushima told the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan that she is still seeking the dismissal of Kyuma, saying, ''He does not pay attention to the continuing sufferings'' of the atomic-bombing survivors and their children as well as grandchildren.

''Following the upgrade of the Defense Agency to a ministry, its minister seems to have nothing to be frightened of and to start running out of control,'' Fukushima said.

The defense minister, who is himself from Nagasaki, caused a stir on Saturday when he said in a speech, ''I understand the bombing (of Nagasaki) brought the war to its end. I think it was something that couldn't be helped.''

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party is concerned about the possibility of adverse impact on the party in the July 29 House of Councillors election as Abe's administration has already been hit by a fiasco of pension recordkeeping blunders and other scandals.

Copyright 2007 Kyodo World Service
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Staff
Publication:Kyodo World Service
Date:Jul 2, 2007
Words:489
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