Prime Minister Fumio Kishida weakened by his links with the Moon sect

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida weakened by his links with the

In Japan, the government of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has been weakened by its links with the Unification Church (or Moon sect) since the assassination of Shinzo Abe by a man who blamed the former Japanese leader for his association with the sect. An internal investigation by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party reveals that 179 of its 379 parliamentarians, half of them, have links with the religious organization accused of having ruined many faithful. Discredited, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida finds himself at rock bottom in the opinion polls.

With our correspondent in Tokyo, Frederic Charles

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida fails to impose on the right wing of the conservative, nationalist, reactionary, revisionist party, of which Shinzo Abe was the leader, the severing of ties with the Unification Church, also ultra-conservative and anti-communist. In front of Parliament, Fumio Kishida, justifies the organization of an expensive national funeral for Shinzo Abe on September 27th.

Compulsory funeral

Imposed by followers of Shinzo Abe, US Vice President Kamala Harris, Indian Prime Minister Narandra Modi will participate. However, the majority of Japanese do not want these state funeral. Over the next few days, the links with the moon sect are likely to become more problematic for Fumio Kishida and paralyze the activity of his government.

By killing Shinzo Abe, his assassin Tetsuya Yamagami shed light on a hitherto taboo subject: the influence of the Moon sect on the Liberal Democratic Party which has dominated Japanese political life for decades.

Respect and authority

Tetsuya Yamagami hated the Unification Church which ruined his mother and destroyed his family. Shinzo Abe and the other conservative parliamentarians gave him respect and authority. In return, the sect helped them win elections.

►Also read : Japan: police chief announces his resignation after the assassination of Shinzo Abe

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