Japan's Takaichi Sends Another Offering to Yasukuni Shrine Despite South Korea, China Criticism

by Hwang Jin Hyun Posted : April 22, 2026, 14:34Updated : April 22, 2026, 14:34
A ritual offering sent by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to Yasukuni Shrine
A ritual offering sent by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to Yasukuni Shrine. [Photo=Reuters/Yonhap]
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has made an additional offering to Yasukuni Shrine.

Kyodo News and NHK reported on the 22nd that Takaichi, through Haruko Arimura, chair of the Liberal Democratic Party’s General Council, donated out of her own pocket the fee for a ritual offering known as a “tamagushi.”

After visiting the shrine, Arimura told reporters that she had prayed with Takaichi’s sentiments in mind and said the prime minister likely hopes to pay her respects there in person someday.

On the first day of the spring festival the previous day, Takaichi did not visit but sent a “masakaki” offering in the name of “Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.” The South Korean and Chinese governments immediately issued critical statements.

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said in a spokesperson’s comment that it was “deeply disappointed and regretful” that responsible Japanese leaders again sent offerings to, or repeatedly visited, Yasukuni, which it said “glorifies Japan’s past wars of aggression” and enshrines war criminals. China’s Foreign Ministry also criticized the move, calling Yasukuni “a symbol of Japan’s militarist wars of aggression” and saying it firmly opposed related developments.

The 22nd marked the second day of the spring festival, and Minoru Kiuchi, the minister in charge of economic and fiscal policy, visited the shrine in person. It was the first confirmed visit by a Cabinet minister since the Takaichi Cabinet took office in October last year. Some ministers sent offerings the previous day but did not visit.

After his visit, Kiuchi told reporters he had expressed gratitude and respect for the spirits of those who “gave their precious lives for the nation.”

Also visiting were junior government officials including Cabinet Office Parliamentary Vice Minister Jun Tsushima and Internal Affairs and Communications Parliamentary Vice Minister Noriko Horiuchi. About 120 lawmakers from a cross-party parliamentary group also went to the shrine together.

Yasukuni commemorates about 2,466,000 people who died in conflicts from the period around the Meiji Restoration through wars waged by imperial Japan, many linked to the Pacific War. It has long been a diplomatic flashpoint because it also enshrines Class-A war criminals, including former Prime Minister Hideki Tojo.



* This article has been translated by AI.