Japanese PM Fired Scandal-Tainted Internal Affairs Minister

Japanese PM Fired Scandal-Tainted Internal Affairs Minister

TOKYO, Nov 21 (NNN-NHK) – Japanese Internal Affairs Minister, Minoru Terada, was sacked by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida yesterday, amid mounting pressure due to a fund-related scandal and declining support for his cabinet, local media reported.

After meeting with Kishida at the prime minister’s official residence, Terada told reporters that, he did not want to be an obstacle to the government’s legislative efforts, during the ongoing parliamentary session, Kyodo News reported yesterday.

Kishida told the press that Terada’s successor will be announced this morning.

Terada’s departure is a fresh blow to the prime minister, as he is the third member of the cabinet to leave in less than a month, following the resignation of two other ministers, due to blunders or close ties to the Unification Church.

Terada, who was in charge of election-related affairs and the communications industry, and a member of Prime Minister, Fumio Kishida’s intraparty group, within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), is alleged to have “falsely reported” expenses to the tune of one million yen (about 7,000 U.S. dollars), connected to last year’s lower house election, with the tab picked up by one of his support groups.

Citing a legal expert, an online article by the Shukan Bunshun weekly magazine said, Terada’s report on his election campaign expenses violated Japan’s public offices election law.

Terada, who assumed his ministerial role in Aug, had previously been under fire for admitting that his support group twice filed annual political funding reports that were signed off by a dead person.

Earlier in the day, the scandal-hit minister said that, he would not step down as a member of parliament, according to the Japan Times.

The Kishida cabinet’s approval ratings have plunged, largely due to the revelation of deep ties between LDP lawmakers and the Unification Church, in the wake of the assassination of former Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe.– NNN-NHK  

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