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DEMOCRACY
Japan confirms Noda as new PM
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 30, 2011

Yoshihiko Noda became Japan's sixth new prime minister in five years Tuesday, inheriting an in-tray groaning with disaster recovery, nuclear crisis and economic gloom in the ageing, debt-choked nation.

The outgoing finance minister takes the place of Naoto Kan, who resigned after just 15 months in office with rock-bottom poll ratings, perpetuating the country's chronic revolving-door leadership at a time of national crisis.

Noda became his centre-left party's third premier, two years to the day since it won a landslide election that ended a half-century of conservative rule -- and at a time of deep voter disenchantment with all major parties.

He was elected premier by both houses of parliament a day after winning a party leadership battle that was fought along factional lines rather than on the five candidates' policy positions or their voter popularity.

Noda, a 54-year-old who was relatively unknown to the electorate, conceded that, based on his looks and charisma, he would not win many votes, instead painting himself as moderate and steadfast, if a little bland.

In a display of humility, Noda stressed that he is an ordinary man without political star power or looks, and promised to be a peacemaker who will unite the deeply divided party and seek to engage the opposition.

The DPJ is deeply split between backers and enemies of scandal-tainted powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa. Noda won the poll after anti-Ozawa factions settled on him as a compromise choice to defeat their opponent's candidate.

As Noda started putting together his new cabinet and DPJ leadership team, he approached figures from the Ozawa camp in a bid to heal the rifts.

Azuma Koshiishi, a senior upper house lawmaker with close ties to Ozawa, said he had accepted the DPJ's number two post of secretary general.

The problems Noda faces would be daunting even for the boldest of leaders.

Half a year after Japan was hit by the March 11 quake and tsunami, the Fukushima nuclear crisis continues, and operator Tokyo Electric Power Company is struggling to bring the reactors to cold shutdown by January.

The radiation that has escaped from its reactors has driven more than 80,000 people from their homes, made some rural areas uninhabitable for years, and contaminated food supplies, some of which have entered the market.

The disaster hit at a time when Japan, a rapidly ageing society, has been stuck in cycles of slow economic growth and deflation for two decades.

The country faces a public debt mountain twice the size of the $5-trillion economy, the legacy of years of stimulus spending, and the bill is set to grow as Japan rebuilds its disaster-hit areas.

On top of these woes, the economy has been hit by a strong yen, which has soared to post-war highs as a safe haven currency amid global market turmoil, hurting Japan's exporters by making their goods less competitive.

As finance minister since June last year, Noda has promoted raising taxes rather than borrowing to pay for quake and nuclear disaster relief, and to reduce the highest debt-to-GDP ratio in the industrialised world.

"We still have problems with the yen's appreciation and with deflation," Noda told reporters Tuesday. "On the topic of fiscal discipline, we need to carry out careful management of the economy and public finances."

On the question of nuclear power, which his predecessor Kan wanted to phase out following the Fukushima disaster, Noda has said that currently shut-down reactors should be restarted once they are deemed safe.

On the foreign policy front, like most of his political peers in Japan, Noda has stated his support for a strong US security alliance and voiced concern about China's rising military spending and growing naval assertiveness.

Noda angered Japan's neighbours, also including South Korea, when he said this month that Japan's World War II leaders convicted by the allied tribunal should not be seen as war criminals because they have paid for their sins.

On Tuesday Noda, who has stressed the economic interdependence of the region's nations, said he wants "win-win relations" with South Korea and China.

A South Korean foreign ministry spokesman said: "We expect to continue to forge mature and future-oriented relationships with the new Japanese government led by Prime Minister Noda as it looks squarely at its past."




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Revolving door of Japanese political leadership
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 30, 2011 - Japan's parliament Tuesday elected Yoshihiko Noda as prime minister, a day after the former finance minister won a leadership contest of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).

Here are the key events in Japanese politics since conservative prime minister Junichiro Koizumi left office in 2006 after a stable five-year tenure, making way for a series of short-lived premiers.

September 26, 2006:

Koizumi's right-hand man Shinzo Abe of the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) becomes prime minister, the first of five leaders who each lasted about a year in office.

Abe sees his approval rating steadily fall amid money scandals, gaffes by cabinet ministers and mismanagement of public pension programmes.

July 29, 2007:

Abe's LDP loses national elections and control of the upper house, as the then-opposition Democratic Party of Japan gains momentum.

September 12, 2007:

Abe resigns and checks into hospital for gastrointestinal inflammation, exhaustion and stress.

September 26, 2007:

Political moderate Yasuo Fukuda of the LDP becomes prime minister and approaches the DPJ for coalition talks, which fail.

Fukuda's public support slips amid legislative deadlock.

September 1, 2008:

Fukuda unexpectedly announces his resignation, saying the country needs a fresh start after a troubled year in office marred by bitter fighting with the opposition.

September 24, 2008:

Former foreign minister Taro Aso of the LDP becomes prime minister.

Gaffe-prone Aso's popularity tumbles as Japan is hit by the fallout of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the global financial crisis.

The scion of a wealthy family, Aso faces criticism for his regular outings to luxurious hotel bars and mispronunciations of commonly-used Chinese characters.

His finance minister Shoichi Nakagawa is later suspected of being heavily drunk during a press conference after a G7 meeting in Rome.

August 30, 2009:

Yukio Hatoyama's DPJ enjoys a landslide victory in general elections, ousting the LDP from power after more than five decades of nearly continuous rule.

September 16, 2009:

Hatoyama becomes prime minister. Naoto Kan becomes deputy prime minister, minister of finance, and minister of state for economic and fiscal policy.

December 18, 2009:

Support for Hatoyama's government dips below 50 percent as he flip-flops over a promise to move an unpopular US base off Okinawa island. He eventually breaks the promise.

February 7, 2010:

Hatoyama is hit by a donation scandal, and another money scandal involving DPJ secretary general Ichiro Ozawa, the architect of the DPJ's election victory.

June 2, 2010:

Hatoyama announces his resignation.

June 8, 2010:

Kan becomes prime minister.

July 11, 2010:

The DPJ loses control of the upper house, which leads to legislative gridlock.

September 7, 2010:

A row with China begins after two Japan coastguard vessels and a Chinese trawler collide in the East China Sea near disputed islands called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese.

February 14, 2011:

Data confirms that China surpassed Japan as the world's second biggest economy in 2010.

March 11, 2011:

A massive 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami hit Japan's northeast, leaving more than 20,000 dead or missing and sparking the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.

June 2, 2011:

Kan survives a no-confidence motion after pledging to eventually hand power to a younger generation amid sagging popularity and divisions within the DPJ.

August 26, 2011:

Kan says he will step down as party chief and premier, pending elections to pick his successor.

August 29, 2011:

Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda is elected DPJ president.





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His saffron robe a rare beacon among protesters, Cambodia's most outspoken monk has been banned from temples and risked arrest for challenging rights abuses - but he vows not to be silenced. "The more they threaten me, the more I stand up for our rights," said the Venerable Loun Sovath, also known as the "multimedia monk" for filming forced evictions and distributing the footage. In a c ... read more


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