Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi announces her
resignation at a press conference in her office in Tokyo on October 20,
2014. Ms Obuchi resigned over claims she misused political funds,
including to buy votes and make-up. AFP PHOTO | YOSHIKAZU TSUNO
TOKYO
Japan's high-profile and
telegenic industry minister on Monday resigned over claims she misused
political funds, including to buy votes and make-up, dealing a blow to
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's gender reform drive.
Yuko
Obuchi told a press conference carried live on multiple television
channels that parliamentary business had been stalled because of
questions over her spending.
"It is not permissible for
me as Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry to have economy and
energy policies stalled because of my own problems," she said.
"I will resign and focus on probing what has been called into question," she told reporters after a 30-minute meeting with Abe.
"As
a member of the Abe cabinet... I am sorry and offer my sincere
apologies for having contributed nothing to economic revival,
realisation of a society in which women shine and various other tasks,"
she said, before bowing deeply to the sound of hundreds of camera
shutters.
PERSONAL BLOW
She
is the first minister to resign since Abe took power in December 2012,
and her loss will be a personal blow to the premier, who has repeatedly
said he wants to boost the lot of women in Japan.
Obuchi, the daughter of a former prime minister, had been tipped to become the country's first female prime minister.
Her
elevation was the big news when Abe reshuffled his cabinet in
September, giving a politician with little cabinet experience a powerful
portfolio that includes oversight of the energy sector.
She
was the most prominent of five women brought into the cabinet, a figure
that ties the record for the most women in an administration.
But
she is now facing claims that, over the five years to 2012, her
political funding body spent more than 10 million yen ($95,000) on
things unconnected to politics, including cosmetics and accessories at a
department store.
Her political group also invited
residents in her electoral district in central Japan on bus tours to see
theatre performances in Tokyo at fees below actual cost — a move
opposition lawmakers have said amounts to "vote-buying".
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