Japan | Emperor Akihito expresses wish to abdicate, NHK says

FILE - In this Jan. 26, 2016, file photo, Japan's Emperor Akihito, right, and Crown Prince Naruhito, left, walk at Haneda international airport in Tokyo. Japan's public television said Wednesday, July 13, 2016, Akihito has expressed intention to retire while still alive. The NHK says the Emperor has conveyed his hopes to relinquish his title to Crown Prince Naruhito within the next few years. It was not known if there was any timeline for his intended retirement, or whether there was related to his recent health conditions. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)

Japan’s Emperor Akihito, the first to serve from the outset in a purely ceremonial role, signaled his wish to step down in a matter of years, national broadcaster NHK reported.
The emperor, 82, has reigned for 28 years, after succeeding his father, Hirohito, in 1989. He would be succeeded by his eldest son, Crown Prince Naruhito, who is 56. NHK yesterday cited unidentified people at the Imperial Household Agency and said the Crown Prince and other family members accepted Akihito’s wishes.
Akihito’s reign is called the Heisei era – whose name translates as “achieving peace” – in the Japanese calendar. While Japan also uses the Western calendar, years are traditionally counted from the start of the reign of each emperor. This year is Heisei 28.
Serving in a strictly symbolic role as prescribed by the U.S.-­imposed constitution, and the first to marry a commoner, Akihito has been credited with helping modernize Japan’s monarchy. His reign began as the nation was at the zenith of its economic power and just a year before its “bubble economy” burst, ushering in decades of economic stagnation.
“This would be huge because Akihito is enormously popular with the public; he is a voice of reconciliation and looks at dealing with the lingering grievances from World War II as his father’s unfinished business,” said Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University in Japan. “He has done more than all of Japan’s politicians put together in terms of raising Japan’s stature in the region – he is known as the people’s Emperor.”
Kingston said it was likely the decision was driven by the Emperor’s advancing age and deteriorating health. Akihito underwent almost four hours of surgery for a successful heart bypass in 2012, and was hospitalized for pneumonia the previous year. The Crown Prince served as regent while his father was recovering. The Emperor also had prostate surgery in 2003.
In visits across Asia and beyond, Akihito addressed the issue of the past aggression Japan’s military carried out in his father’s name. In 1990, he apologized for Japan’s colonization of Korea from 1910 to 1945. Two years later, during the first visit by a Japanese monarch to China, he acknowledged that Japan had “inflicted great suffering” on its neighbor in the first half of the century.
Prior to Japan’s defeat, emperors including Hirohito had been traditionally regarded as living deities, directly descended from the sun goddess Amaterasu. The nation’s people were considered their subjects.
In a speech last year to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, Emperor Akihito expressed “deep remorse” over his country’s actions in the conflict. The remarks – his first such expression of regret since coming to the throne in 1989 – contrasted with those of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who said in a statement at the time that Japan shouldn’t be expected to continually apologize.
“It’s not an economic issue but the Emperor is very widely respected,” Robert Feldman, chief economist at Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities Co. in Tokyo, said on Bloomberg TV. “In Japan the notion of the Emperor as a symbol of the state is very important. From an economic point of view, it’s very important for social cohesion.”
Japan’s currency was little changed after the news, trading at 104.63 per dollar as of 8:29 p.m. in Tokyo. The yen has climbed almost 15 percent this year, escalating the challenges for Akihito’s nation, which tumbled into stagnation and deflation in the early years of his reign.
Emperor Kokaku, who gave up the throne in 1817, was the last emperor to abdicate, NHK said. There is no provision in the Imperial Household Law for such a move, and a legal change is likely to be required, according to the public broadcaster.
His successor, Naruhito, is married to a former diplomat, Crown Princess Masako, and has one child, Princess Aiko. Naruhito’s successor would be the son of his younger brother, as women cannot succeed to the throne. James Mayger and Keiko Ujikane, Bloomberg

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