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Is Japan Abandoning Pacifism?

New laws mean Japanese troops can fight overseas for the first time since World War Two. The impassioned debate over whether Japan is betraying its pacifist constitution.

Japan is a pacifist country - at least that is what its constitution says. The wording, introduced under the occupying forces after World War Two, seems unequivocal: 鈥渢he Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation鈥.

But new laws championed by conservative prime minister Shinzo Abe introduce a broader interpretation of what the constitution does, and does not, permit. Abe calls it 鈥減roactive pacifism鈥. Opponents say the laws are 鈥渨ar bills鈥, betraying the pacifism that has, for many, become central to Japanese national identity. There have been dramatic scenes in parliament with opposition MPs in tears. The majority of the public are opposed and people have taken to the streets in their tens of thousands. So is Japan abandoning pacifism?

(Photo: Sumiteru Taniguchi. Credit: AP)

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Sun 27 Sep 2015 13:06GMT

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