Japan government on Tuesday honored the assassinated former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe with a state funeral and military display in the nation’s capital.
Under heavy security precautions and surrounded by angry protesters, some 4,300 mourners from Japan and abroad took part in the ceremony at the Nippon Budokan hall in Tokyo ignoring critics of people who said Abe did not deserve the rare ceremony.
Among the dignitaries present at the occasion were U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and former German president, Christian Wulff.
Abe’s widow, Akie, dressed in a black formal kimono, carried the urn containing the ashes into the hall amid the thunder of cannon blasts.
Soldiers in white received the urn at the hall and placed it on a pedestal while the military band played the national anthem.
Mourners sat in front of a huge portrait of the former prime minister.
In a nearby park, people laid flowers and prayed at two tables laid out for the occasion since the morning.
In his speech, the current head of government Fumio Kishida praised his mentor Abe as a politician with a clear vision for the development of Japan and the world, saying he should have lived much longer.
Abe was Japan’s longest-serving head of government in the post-war period.
However, Abe is controversial for his nationalist agenda and his involvement in nepotism scandals.
In polls, a majority said they rejected the state ceremony for Abe and said that current Prime Minister Fumio Kishida who also belongs to Abe’s conservative party had no right to give Abe such a state honour.
Some opposition parties boycotted the state funeral.
Abe’s opponents also recalled the former prime minister’s attempts to whitewash Japan’s wartime atrocities and change the pacifist post-war constitution.
Since the end of the war, there has only been one state funeral for a prime minister in 1967 Shigeru Yoshida.
Their ceremony was also criticised at the time.
The government stressed that the state funeral was not intended to force anybody to mourn.
Some 20,000 police officers were deployed for the event in case of any unrest.
The conservative leader was shot by a former military officer with a homemade gun during a campaign speech in the city of Nara on July 8.
His assassin has said since his arrest that he did not kill Abe on account of his political convictions, but rather out of hatred for the controversial Unification Church of Korean religious leader Sun Myung Moon, to which he linked Abe.
He told investigators that his mother had donated money to the church and in so doing ruined the family financially.
Four days after his assassination, Abe was cremated in a temple in the capital following a private funeral. NAN