Japan PM vows to stay on despite election debacle

Japan PM vows to stay on despite election debacle
Shigeru Ishiba, Japan's Prime Minister and leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), reacts during a press conference at the party's headquarters in Tokyo on October 28, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 28 October 2024
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Japan PM vows to stay on despite election debacle

Japan PM vows to stay on despite election debacle

TOKYO: Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba vowed Monday to stay in office despite his gamble of snap elections backfiring, with the ruling party’s worst result in 15 years.
Ishiba, 67, called Sunday’s election days after taking office on October 1, but voters angry at a slush fund scandal punished his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which has governed Japan almost non-stop since 1955.
With projections suggesting the LDP-led coalition would lose its ruling majority, Ishiba vowed to stay in office, saying he would not allow a “political vacuum.”
“I want to fulfill my duty by protecting people’s lives, protecting Japan,” Ishiba told reporters.
He said the biggest election factor was “people’s suspicion, mistrust and anger” over a scandal, which saw LDP figures pocket money from fund-raising events and which helped sink his predecessor Fumio Kishida.
“I will enact fundamental reform regarding the issue of money and politics,” Ishiba told reporters, repeating that voters had delivered a “severe judgment” on the party.
The yen hit a three-month low, sliding more than one percent against the dollar, as exit polls and results reported by national broadcaster NHK and other media showed the worst result for the LDP and its junior coalition partner Komeito in 15 years.
They were projected to fall short of Ishiba’s stated goal of winning at least 233 seats — a majority in the 456-member lower house.
The LDP won 191 seats, down from 259 at the last election in 2021, and Komeito 24, according to NHK tallies. Official results were expected later Monday.
Ahead of the election, Japanese media had speculated that if this happened, Ishiba could potentially quit, becoming the nation’s shortest-serving prime minister in the post-war period.
On Monday the LDP’s election committee chief, former premier Junichiro Koizumi’s son Shinjiro Koizumi, resigned.
The most likely next step is that Ishiba will now seek to head a minority government, with the divided opposition seen as probably incapable of forming a coalition of their own, analysts said.
Ishiba said Monday he was not considering a broader coalition “at this point.”
“Lawmakers aligned with (former prime minister Shinzo) Abe were cold-shouldered under Ishiba, so they could potentially pounce on the opportunity to take their revenge,” Yu Uchiyama, political science professor at the University of Tokyo, told AFP.
“But at the same time, with the number of LDP seats reduced so much, they might take the high road and support Ishiba for now, thinking it’s not the time for infighting,” he said.
A big winner was former premier Yoshihiko Noda’s opposition Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP) which increased its projected seat tally to 148 from 96 at the last election.
Ishiba had promised to not actively support LDP politicians caught up in the funding scandal.
But the opposition jumped on media reports that the party has provided 20 million yen ($132,000) each to district offices headed by these figures, who were still standing in the election.
“Voters chose which party would be the best fit to push for political reforms,” Noda said late Sunday, adding that the “LDP-Komeito administration cannot continue.”
Mirroring elections elsewhere, fringe parties did well, with Reiwa Shinsengumi, founded by a former actor, tripling its seats to nine after promising to abolish sales tax and boost pensions.
The anti-immigration and traditionalist Conservative Party of Japan, established in 2023 by nationalist writer Naoki Hyakuta, won its first three seats.
The number of women lawmakers meanwhile reached a record high at 73, according to NHK, but still representing less than 16 percent of the legislature.
“As long as our own lives don’t improve, I think everyone has given up on the idea that we can expect anything from politicians,” restaurant worker Masakazu Ikeuchi, 44, told AFP on Monday in rainy Tokyo.
“I think the outcome was a result of people across Japan wanting to change the current situation,” said fellow voter Takako Sasaki, 44.


Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says
Updated 35 sec ago
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Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

Around 40 soldiers killed in attack on Chad military base, presidency says

DAKAR: Around 40 soldiers were killed in an attack on a military base in Chad’s Lake region on Sunday, the central African country’s presidency said on Monday.
President Mahamat Idriss Deby launched an operation to track down the assailants, the statement said.
The presidency did not name the group responsible for the attack. The region is often attacked by the Boko Haram insurgency, which erupted in northeast Nigeria in 2009 and spread to the west of Chad.


2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria
Updated 4 min 34 sec ago
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2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

2 people fatally shot in a rural area of northern Austria

VIENNA: Two people were fatally shot on Monday in a rural area of northern Austria, police said, and the suspected shooter was on the run.
The body of a man was found early Monday in the Muehlviertel area of Upper Austria province, the Austria Press Agency reported. Police said later in the morning that there was a second victim.
They didn't identify either victim but Austrian media reported, without naming sources, that one was a local mayor.


Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds
Updated 8 min 5 sec ago
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Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

Six children died from pesticide poisoning in South Africa, lab analysis finds

JOHANNESBURG: Six children who died in a South African township earlier this month had ingested a chemical compound used in pesticides, the country’s health minister said on Monday, in a case that has prompted calls for tighter food safety controls.
Local media have reported that the children died after eating snacks bought from an informal cornershop in the Soweto township near Johannesburg.
“The cause of death is unequivocally organophosphate ... a group of substances, which are usually used in agriculture or as pesticides,” Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi told reporters as he announced the findings of a toxicology analysis.
Health officials are still waiting for the results of tests on swabs from informal township cornershops — known as spaza shops in South Africa — in Soweto as they try to establish where the organophosphate came from.
“Our theory, until we are proven otherwise, is that they (the shops) are using it as pesticides to kill rats ... It is also being sold to communities for killing rats,” Motsoaledi said, adding that pesticide products containing organophosphate were not routinely meant to be used in people’s homes.
“Any poison you use to kill pests or whatever domestically is not supposed to kill human beings,” he said.


UK anti-Islam activist ‘Tommy Robinson’ admits breaching injunction

UK anti-Islam activist ‘Tommy Robinson’ admits breaching injunction
Updated 49 min 5 sec ago
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UK anti-Islam activist ‘Tommy Robinson’ admits breaching injunction

UK anti-Islam activist ‘Tommy Robinson’ admits breaching injunction
  • Yaxley-Lennon was accused by some media and politicians of inflaming tensions which led to days of rioting across Britain

LONDON: British anti-Muslim activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known by the pseudonym Tommy Robinson, on Monday admitted contempt of court by breaching an injunction made after he was successfully sued for libel.
Yaxley-Lennon was made subject to an injunction in 2021, preventing him from repeating libellous statements about a Syrian refugee who he wrongly claimed had attacked a girl at his school.
Britain's Solicitor General took legal action against Yaxley-Lennon for contempt of court for breaching the injunction. Yaxley-Lennon appeared at London's Woolwich Crown Court and admitted breaching the injunction on Monday.
Yaxley-Lennon was accused by some media and politicians of inflaming tensions which led to days of rioting across Britain at the end of July in the wake of the murder of three young girls at a dance workshop in Southport.
He appeared at court in custody after he was charged on Friday under terrorism laws with failing to provide his mobile phone PIN code when he left Britain in July.


Joy across Kabul after Afghanistan’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup cricket win

Joy across Kabul after Afghanistan’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup cricket win
Updated 55 min 52 sec ago
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Joy across Kabul after Afghanistan’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup cricket win

Joy across Kabul after Afghanistan’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup cricket win
  • Cricket is considered the most popular sport in Afghanistan
  • Sunday’s win is Afghanistan A’s 1st-ever title in Emerging Teams Asia Cup

KABUL: Afghans in Kabul celebrated with joy and pride on Monday after the country’s cricket team won the 2024 ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup.

Afghanistan A beat Sri Lanka A at the finals in Muscat, Oman on Sunday evening, giving them their first-ever title in the tournament organized by the Asian Cricket Council, aimed at developing talented young cricketers in Asia.

People in Kabul and other Afghan cities were swift to mark the national team’s victory with celebratory fireworks, which was how Khalil Ahmed first learned about the win.

“It was a very happy moment after a long and tiring day. Cricket has given us continuous joy and happiness and the heroes made us proud in many stages. They came from nowhere but reached heights,” Ahmed, a vendor based in Kabul, told Arab News.

Cricket is considered the most popular sport in Afghanistan and has represented a rare bright spot for many Afghans as they struggle amid a devastating economic and humanitarian crisis sparked by sanctions slapped on the Taliban administration following their takeover in 2021.

In June, the main national team made history when it won a place for the first time in the semifinals of the Twenty20 World Cup.

Sunday’s winning Afghanistan A, the “second tier” of international Afghan cricket, stands just below the full national team.

“It’s a big victory. A win for the whole country. Our boys are making history. With very little facilities and support, our national team has made significant achievements,” said Sharifullah Khan, a 54-year-old taxi driver in Kabul.

“They make us proud and bring so much happiness to the nation. The people and country’s leaders need to encourage our heroes and support them as much as they can. The boys are trying hard but with little support,” he said. “If we have those facilities that other nations have, our heroes will win not only Asia but the whole world.”

Ahmad Zia, another cricket fan who resides in Afghanistan’s second-largest city of Kandahar, is hoping that the latest win will inspire the government to provide the team with more support.

“Our heroes are working very hard. The equipment they possess is little, but their morale is very high and their love for the country is immense. With their efforts and prayers and support from the nation, they continue to shine and make more victories,” he told Arab News.

“The officials need to provide more facilities and support to the team. With increased support, they will make even bigger victories.”