• Wednesday, March 12, 2025

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In China, not all are sad with Shinzo Abe’s assassination as netizens call for ‘champagne celebrations’

The late Shinzo Abe with Chinese president Xi Jinping in Beijing, China, in December 2019. (Photo by Noel Celis – Pool/ Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

WHILE the Chinese government on Friday (8) expressed shock and sympathy over the assassination of former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe in the city of Nara in Japan during a campaign rally by an armed individual, the country’s netizens gloated calling for “champagne celebrations”.

Abe was shot while delivering his speech and collapsed. He was airlifted to a hospital where the doctors tried to revive him for hours but failed. The 67-year-old was the longest-serving prime minister of Japan who stepped down in 2020 on health grounds.

ALSO READ: PM Modi expresses shock over Abe assassination, India calls for national mourning on July 9

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian was quoted as saying by Japan’s Kyodo News, “China is shocked”. He said that Abe “made contributions to promoting the improvement and development of China-Japan relations”.

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Earlier, in guarded remarks at the media briefing well before Abe’s death was officially announced, Zhao said, “We noted this unexpected incident and we are shocked. We are following the situation.”

“We hope former prime minister Abe will be out of danger and recover soon”, he said, adding that China will extend sympathies to his family.

However, the official also parried questions on the adverse reactions in Weibo, akin to Twitter in China, where some netizens called for “popping champagne”, making caustic comments over his strong policies towards China besides defence of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of its mainland.

“I won’t comment on the remarks of the net users,” Zhao said.

He said China expressed sympathies with Abe’s family and that “this unexpected incident” shouldn’t be linked with bilateral relations.

In a bid to tone down the bitterness over the strong policy pursued and advocated by Abe against China, including his campaign to revive the Japanese military citing China’s threat, Zhao said, “On what he did with regard to bilateral ties during his time in the office, we noted that former prime minister Abe once made contributions to pushing forward the improvement of China-Japan relations”.

The Chinese have a love, hate relationship with Japan.

Historically, they fought two bitter wars-the first Sino-Japanese war, 1894-95 and the second in 1934-45, during World War II. It was called the Asian holocaust as millions of Chinese civilians were killed.

The second war resulted in the Nanjing Massacre in which thousands of Chinese were killed. Nanjing is a city in eastern China.

In recent years, the relations turned sour over China’s expansive claims over the Senkaku islands, which Beijing calls Diaoyu islands in East China Sea.
But Japan has also remained the most favoured tourist country for millions of Chinese who swarm Japanese cities every year.

Initially, Abe pushed forward with a policy to improve ties with China and met Chinese president Xi Jinping in 2014 during his visit to Beijing to take part in the APEC summit followed by another in 2019 at the G-20 summit in Osaka in Japan. But later, he became a vocal critic of China, calling on Beijing to avoid antagonising other nations and stop demanding more territory from its neighbours.

Abe also deepened strategic partnerships with India, Vietnam and other regional powers as well as EU and UK and also upgraded Japan’s own defence capabilities.

Abe was also one of the architects of the Quad, the US, India, Japan and Australia alliance aimed at countering China’s growing influence and military might.

[With PTI inputs]

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