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Yasukuni Shrine
Asia

Japanese lawmakers to visit controversial war shrine

Dozens of Japanese politicians, possibly including cabinet ministers, are poised to visit a Tokyo shrine condemned by China and South Korea as a symbol of Tokyo's militarist past, as it begins its autumn festival this week.

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The controversial Yasukuni war shrine in Tokyo. Photo: AFP

Dozens of Japanese politicians, possibly including cabinet ministers, are poised to visit a Tokyo shrine condemned by China and South Korea as a symbol of Tokyo's militarist past, as it begins its autumn festival this week.

A cross-party group of national lawmakers plans to go to Yasukuni Shrine en masse on Friday as it kicks off the four-day festival.

However, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who infuriated Beijing and Seoul by visiting the shrine in December last year, is thought unlikely to go.

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He will attend an Asia-Europe summit in Milan set for tomorrow and Friday and is believed to have one eye on budding signs of an improved relationship with China, with view to a possible sidelines summit at a major international meeting next month.

The parliamentarians' group said it does not know how many will join Friday's visit.

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In recent years, dozens of lawmakers have participated in the shrine's spring and autumn festivals as well as the August 15 anniversary of Japan's surrender in the second world war.

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