Japan to review if documents linked to Abe scandal are real
TOKYO — Japan’s education minister said Friday he will launch a new investigation into documents that allegedly show Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pressured bureaucrats to give preferential treatment to a school run by a friend.
The Kake Educational Institution, run by Abe’s friend, was seeking approval for a new veterinary college. Abe’s wife, Akie, also served as honorary principal of a kindergarten operated by Kake.
Abe and other top officials have repeatedly questioned the authenticity of the documents, which allegedly indicate that Abe’s office pressured government ministries to approve the school’s application. Kake had already obtained the city-owned property in Imabari in western Japan for free.
They have rejected demands by opposition lawmakers for testimony in parliament by a retired senior education ministry official, Kihei Maekawa, who recently acknowledged the existence of the documents and of political pressure. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga has repeatedly dismissed Maekawa’s statements and even criticized his private life in harsh language.


