Ryokichi Kawashima, a 94-year-old parliamentary election candidate, speaks in front of his election campaign poster
When Ryokichi Kawashima burst into a Tokyo city office to register as a
candidate in Japan's parliamentary election, the woman behind the
counter first froze, then stuttered: "Are you serious?"
He was. Kawashima had just taken 3 million yen ($36,400) from the sum
saved for his funeral and at 94, and just three hours before the
deadline, he became the oldest contender for Sunday's election to the
lower house of parliament.
"I just felt that now it was my turn," said Kawashima, proudly pointing
at his poster on a board in Hanyu, a sleepy town tucked away among rice
fields on the fringes of the sprawling Tokyo metropolis, reports
Reuters.
"It occurred to me when I watched a TV debate between the major
parties," he said, speaking in Japanese. "I just couldn't stand how
fragmented and disorganized they have become. They have no grip on
reality."
The silver-haired Kawashima is an independent, self-financed and his
campaign team is mostly family. He acknowledges he has little chance of
winning a constituency that is also being contested by candidates from
the ruling Democratic Party of Japan and the main opposition Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP).
The LDP is heavily tipped to win the most seats in the election.
But Kawashima, born in the year that marked the end of World War One,
represents the most-talked-about and fastest growing part of the
Japanese society: the elderly.
Japan has aged at an unprecedented pace over the past three decades and
at little over 30 million, those aged 65 or older make up a quarter of
the country's population, stretching Japan's annual social security bill
to 100 trillion yen.
There is a general consensus among political parties that the benefits
must be reformed, with more of a focus on an "all-generation" system
rather than the current emphasis on the elderly.
But Kawashima, who is using posters, flyers and flags in his campaign, is not making benefits for the elderly an issue.
Instead, he drives around in his white Suzuki pushing a staunchly anti-nuclear and anti-nationalist stance.
Relations with China are a hot campaign topic after long simmering
tensions over a disputed island chain flared up in September when Japan
bought the rocky islets from a private Japanese owner, triggering
anti-Japanese protests.
"I fought in the Sino-Japanese war for seven years and the Chinese
helped me survive in the tough post-war years, so I know them well,"
said Kawashima.
"That whole dispute over the islands and talk that they will invade us
is just pure fear-mongering. Their rulers may say such things, but I
know they would never do anything like that."
Kawashima, a widower, lives on his own and looks eminently capable of
looking after himself. His driving license is valid for another three
years, he only needs a stick to help walk, and does not use spectacles.
-culled from REUTERS
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