Audio By Carbonatix
apan's Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa has said he will resign for health reasons, amid claims that he was drunk at a recent G7 meeting.
Mr Nakagawa said he would resign after the government's budget is passed by the lower house of parliament.
He earlier apologised for his behaviour at last weekend's news conference in Rome but blamed cold remedies for a slurred performance there.
He said he had not drunk more than a sip of alcohol before facing the media.
"I want to apologise once again as I caused tremendous bother to people because of the press conference after the G7 in Rome," Mr Nakagawa told reporters in Tokyo on Tuesday.
"I visited hospital last night and this morning and was diagnosed to have a bad lower back, cold and fatigue. I'll do my best to fulfil my duties for the remaining days."
Mr Nakagawa's resignation is seen as a major blow to Prime Minister Taro Aso's government in an election year, correspondents say.
'Embarrassing'
The news conference in Rome followed a meeting of finance ministers focussing on the current world economic crisis.
Footage showed Mr Nakagawa slurring his speech and closing his eyes repeatedly as if he was dozing off.
At one point, he mistook a question aimed at the governor of the Bank of Japan as one intended for him.
"It's embarrassing," said Democratic Party Secretary General Yukio Hatoyama. "This has sent a message to the whole world. He's damaged the national interest."
He explained that he had sipped wine at a luncheon toast on the day of the news conference, but had not consumed an entire glass.
He said he had taken too much medicine, including cold remedy, and that had made him drowsy.
Mr Nakagawa has denied reports - including the view of a former prime minister - that he is a regular drinker.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Lawerh Foundation, AyaPrep to introduce Dangme-language maths module
12 minutes -
US forces seize a sixth Venezuela-linked oil tanker in Caribbean Sea
22 minutes -
Votes being counted in Uganda election as opposition alleges rigging
28 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses government of deliberate LGBT push in schools
29 minutes -
National security task force storms ‘trotro’ terminals to halt illegal fare hikes
32 minutes -
U.S. visa restriction development for Ghana concerning – Samuel Jinapor
33 minutes -
Uganda election chief says he has had threats over results declaration
39 minutes -
Quality control lapses allowed LGBT content into teachers’ manual – IFEST
40 minutes -
Akufo-Addo’s name will be “written in gold” in Ghana’s history in the fullness of time – Jinapor
42 minutes -
Tread cautiously about financial hedging – US-based Associate Professor to BoG
42 minutes -
LGBTQ curriculum row: Quality control failure, not timing, caused teacher manual controversy – Dr Anti-Partey
45 minutes -
Banks wrote-off GH¢1.39bn as bad debt in 10-months of 2025
50 minutes -
I cannot rate the lands minister’s performance, but… – Abu Jinapor
51 minutes -
Accra’s traffic to blame for public transport crisis—GPRTU
51 minutes -
Banks’ record 47.8% year-on-year growth in profit to GH¢12.6bn in 10-months of 2025
1 hour
