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Japan PM's aide may be charged over funds -media

A former aide to Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama may be charged with falsifying political funding records, the Asahi newspaper said today, a development that could dent support for the government ahead of elections next year.

If Hatoyama's Democratic Party fails to win a majority in the 2010 upper house election it will have to maintain an awkward coalition with two small parties, with whom it differs on security and other policies, in order to pass bills smoothly.

The scandal has plagued Hatoyama since before the Democrats trounced the long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party in August's lower house elections but analysts have said it was likely he would survive any fallout from it.

The Asahi said the charges may come after the current session of parliament ends, which could be Nov. 30 or slightly later.

The top cabinet spokesman said today the government would take no action on the matter.

"This is a personal matter," Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano told reporters. "The prime minister will decide for himself how to deal with it."

Hatoyama, one of Japan's richest politicians, has acknowledged the secretary filed false reports, including claims of donations received from people who were deceased, but he said the money involved was his own.

A staff member at Hatoyama's office said he did not know the whereabouts of the former secretary, who was dismissed in June.

No evidence has been found to show that Hatoyama was directly involved in the falsification, which involves more than 200 million yen (US$2.3 million) in funds, the Asahi said.

"Unless the prosecutors decide to prosecute Hatoyama himself ... the scenarios of him really getting in enough trouble to have to resign are not currently very probable," said Steven Reed, a politics professor at Chuo University. "But it's still in the prosecutors' court and no one ever knows what the prosecutors are thinking."

A poll published by the Mainichi newspaper today showed support for Hatoyama's government at 64 percent, in line with other media surveys and high compared with previous administrations.

Opinion was split in the poll over the importance of the funding scandal, with 41 percent of those polled by the Mainichi saying it was, while 46 percent said it was not.

But more than two thirds of the respondents to a separate poll in the conservative Sankei newspaper today said they were not happy with the way he had handled the problem.

Hatoyama, who took over as party leader after his predecessor Ichiro Ozawa was forced to resign in another scandal, has also apologised for being careless in failing to declare about US$800,000 worth of income from share sales in 2008.



 

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