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Japan prosecutors won’t pursue case against ex-ministers over LDP funding scandal: report

  • The investigators will give up prosecuting the group due to the difficulty of proving fundraising violations in the case, a report says
  • Accounting staff from the so-called Abe faction have admitted the alleged activities and are likely to be prosecuted, the report adds

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Japanese prosecutors prepare to search the office of House of Representatives lawmaker Yoshitaka Ikeda from the LDP’s largest faction in Nagoya on December 27 amid a fundraising scandal. Photo: Kyodo

Japanese investigators will give up prosecuting a former trade minister and other ruling party heavyweights over alleged fundraising violations due to the difficulty of proving the case, newspaper Mainichi reported on Saturday.

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The alleged irregularities have already led to a decision by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to force four ministers out of his cabinet last month, and whether they will be prosecuted has been the focus for the continuity of the unpopular administration.

Tokyo prosecutors are giving up building criminal cases against recent secretary generals of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)’s biggest faction formerly headed by the late Prime Minister Shinzo Abe including former trade minister Yasutoshi Nishimura and former chief cabinet secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, Mainichi reported, citing a source familiar with the matter.

The investigators have interviewed Nishimura, Matsuno and two other faction bigwigs, but they denied collusion in raising funds and distributing them to faction members without required disclosures, while the faction’s accounting staff have admitted the alleged activities and will likely be prosecuted, Mainichi said.

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The prosecutor’s office could not be reached for comment outside business hours. The office previously said it could not comment on any ongoing investigation. Nishimura and Matsuno have not commented on media reports about their alleged involvement.

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