Bloomberg
Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was questioned by prosecutors looking into allegations political funds were improperly used to subsidise parties for voters, Kyodo News reported, in a case casting a shadow over the current premier.
Abe submitted to voluntary questioning by prosecutors, Kyodo cited sources close to the matter as saying. The Kyodo report added prosecutors are seeking to build a case against Abe’s state-paid secretary for allegedly not recording income and expenditures related to the dinner functions. National public broadcaster NHK also had a similar report.
Prosecutors said they wouldn’t comment on individual cases. But the Tokyo Shimbun newspaper and other media have said the investigation centered on whether the aide violated campaign financing laws by using the funds to subsidise dinner parties for supporters, held every year at a hotel the night before a publicly funded cherry-blossom party.
Abe, who stepped down in September for health reasons, has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing over the gatherings. But his statements in the parliament have contradicted findings of prosecutors as
reported in the media at least 118 times, public broadcaster NHK
reported on Tuesday.
, citing a parliamentary research bureau. Toward the end of 2019, Abe faced stiff questioning in parliament from opposition members over the blossom parties.
Current Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, who served as Abe’s right-hand man during his record stint as premier, has defended him over the scandal. Support for Suga slumped 17 percentage points to 39% in a poll published by the Asahi newspaper Sunday, amid the investigation and renewed concerns over his handling of the coronavirus. The fallout could affect the timing of the next election, with the lower house term set to end Oct. 21.
“The mere fact of an Abe scandal being back in the news and a target of prosecutors’ scrutiny is enough to make life difficult for a prime minister who is carrying on the work of the Abe administration,†said Tobias Harris, a Japan analyst at consultancy Teneo, and author of a biography of Abe.
While it is highly unusual for a former Japanese prime minister to be convicted of a crime, Kakuei Tanaka was convicted on bribery charges in the Lockheed case in 1983. The former premier was sentenced to prison, but died while his case was still on appeal.