Koizumi's
Pyongyang hostage gamble By J Sean
Curtin
After a dramatic one-day hostage-rescue visit
to Pyongyang that transfixed Japan, Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi returned to Tokyo with five former child
hostages - and a question mark hanging over his own
future. Will his gamble pay off politically in Japan and
advance the international talks aimed at defusing the
Korean nuclear crisis?
Though his
brief summit with the reclusive North Korean leader Kim
Jong-il was partially successful, resulting in the
release of five children of former abductees - they
returned to Tokyo Saturday night to joyful, tearful
reunions - severe criticism from the families of some of
the missing abductees threatens to seriously undermine
Koizumi and could weaken his hold on the
premiership.
In a torrent
of almost unprecedented criticism of the premier, angry
kin of the some of the abductees - the 10 or so still
missing - denounced him as "deceitful", "irresponsible"
and said he had "betrayed" them.
Koizumi told a news conference in
Pyongyang that Japan would provide 250,000 tons of food
aid to North Korea as well as medical supplies worth $10
million in the coming months. The country is hungry, its
people malnourished and its economy failing. The prime
minister explained that this would be distributed
through international humanitarian organizations,
categorically denying the suggestion that the aid had
been offered in exchange for a resolution to the
abduction issue. The families of some abductees
dismissed Koizumi's assertions, angrily attacking him
for rewarding Pyongyang for releasing people it had no
right to detain.
Last
month Tokyo promised to give North Korea $100,000 in emergency medical
relief supplies after a catastrophic train accident that occurred on
April 22 in Ryongchon, a town near the country's
border with China. To lessen the political
impact of all the assistance pledges, the
government has stressed that it will not extend regular
economic assistance to Pyongyang until bilateral ties are fully normalized.
The surprise visit - no doubt carefully planned
in advance - was suddenly announced a week ago as a
scandal about the non-payment of obligatory pension
premiums by politicians engulfed the government and even
threatened the prime minister, who also had missed some
payments many years ago. A successful Pyongyang summit
was seen as crucial for Koizumi who needs to regain the
political initiative, put the pension scandal behind him
and strengthen the position of his ruling Liberal
Democratic Party before crucial elections to the Upper
House of the Diet, or Parliament, on July 12. And
advancing the cause of stability and ending North
Korea's nuclear program would help.
Before
leaving Japan, Koizumi seemed confident that he would be
able to gain the release of some of the children of the
abductees and make progress on the nuclear arms issue.
What he could not have predicted was the enormous
backlash from the families of 10 abductees who remain
uncounted for. North Korea says eight died and two
others never entered the country.
As many as 15
ordinary Japanese citizens were abducted by North Korean
spies in the 1970s and 1980s, presumably to assist North
Korean agents in learning the Japanese language, idioms
and customs.
The Pyongyang summit completely
dominated news in Japan on Saturday, getting almost
continuous live television coverage. This made the
scathing criticisms of Koizumi extremely damaging.
Koizumi
addressed his nation from Pyongyang in a short press conference before departing for Tokyo.
He highlighted his achievements, concentrating on the release
of the five abductee-hostage children, the
sons and daughters of kidnapped Japanese returned to
Tokyo after his own visit to Pyongyang in
September 2002. He focused on the arrangements for a reunion of
two other children and their American father, Charles
Jenkins, the husband of former abductee Hitomi Soga.
They are to meet in the future in Beijing. Jenkins
refused to fly to Japan with his children, since he is
an army deserter from the Korean war and feared being
extradited to America if he went to Tokyo; the statute
of limitations on his prosecution runs out in about a
year and a half.
Koizumi also announced that the
North Koreans would re-investigate the cases of the 10
people Tokyo claims were abducted by North Korea. The
prime minister also said progress had been made on the
nuclear issue and said the North Korean leader promised
co-operation with the international community on the
issue.
Back in
Tokyo, reaction to Koizumi's words was swift and damning. Even
though the parents of the children who were
released were overjoyed, they still said they were disappointed
and felt very sorry for the other families who had no
news of their loved ones. The relatives of
abductees unaccounted for were seething with anger.
One
after another, they denounced Koizumi in the strongest
possible terms, calling him "deceitful" and
"irresponsible" and saying he had personally "betrayed"
them. They all implied he should resign, creating a
crisis for the premier. These comments were replayed
several times on national television, lessening the
impact of the joyous reunions, the late night return of
the five children who rejoined their tearful parents.
The reunions were also broadcast live on Japanese TV.
Koizumi made arrangements to speak with the
angry relatives of abductees to try to calm them down,
but it was unclear how the situation would develop. The
prime minister is certainly in a very difficult
situation and if he cannot get the relatives to support
him, he will be substantially weakened in the run-up to
the vital Upper House elections this summer.
The
next few days could be make or break for Koizumi as he
battles to turn around what could be a public relations
disaster.
Before departing, Koizumi knew that he would not
be able to completely satisfy the relatives of those eight
abductees who Pyongyang claims are dead. The ferocity
of the family criticisms probably caught the prime
minister off guard, but he must have calculated that
this could be neutralized by joyous scenes of family
reunions in Tokyo.
An
arrangement for Jenkins, the
US Army deserter, and his two daughters to meet up with
their Japanese mother in Beijing will also conjure up
some more emotionally positive images to counteract the
negative aspects of the story. In the past, Koizumi has
demonstrated an amazing flare for using the media to his
advantage. He must be hoping that his skills have not
deserted him on this occasion.
Before flying off to North Korea,
Koizumi had outlined four objectives:
To secure the release of the families of the five
former abductees who returned to Japan in September
2002, after Koizumi's first visit to Pyongyang;
To learn more about the other 10 abductees Pyongyang
has said are either dead or never entered the country;
To persuade Pyongyang to halt its nuclear weapons
program;
To set up a framework for normalizing ties between the
two nations. Tokyo said relations with Pyongyang could not
be normalized until the issue of the abductees was
resolved.
The next round of six-party talk on defusing
the North Korea nuclear crisis will be held in Beijing
in June, though the date has not been set. Besides
North Korea and South Korea, the other parties are
China, Japan, Russia and the United States.
Another vital but unstated goal was to generate positive
publicity for the prime minister and his administration
in the LDP election campaign and to divert
public attention from increasing political problems,
such as the pension scandal and unfulfilled promises of
reforms on the domestic front. The economy, however, is
recovering from its economic doldrums and that should
help Koizumi and the LDP.
The drama is
unfolding; stay tuned.
J Sean Curtin
is a GLOCOM http://www.glocom.org/ fellow at the
Tokyo-based Japanese Institute of Global
Communications.
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