City
Epaper

Japanese rally against PM Takaichi's attempt to revise constitution

By IANS | Updated: February 28, 2026 09:30 IST

Tokyo, Feb 28 Large numbers of Japanese citizens gathered in Tokyo to protest Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's attempt ...

Open in App

Tokyo, Feb 28 Large numbers of Japanese citizens gathered in Tokyo to protest Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's attempt to revise the country's pacifist Constitution.

Nearly 1,000 people attended the demonstration in front of the prime minister's official residence on Friday evening, holding placards reading "Oppose war, defend the Constitution," and "No war, no Takaichi."

Protesters chanted slogans such as "No constitutional revision" and "Protect peace," voicing strong dissatisfaction with the government's direction, reports Xinhua news agency.

Chiharu Tomiyama, one of the demonstrators, told reporters that Takaichi had repeatedly advocated constitutional revision even before becoming prime minister, and that her renewed push must be stopped.

Another protester, identified as Koyama, said that while the government continues to increase defence spending, ordinary people are struggling with worsening livelihoods. The Takaichi administration is trying to move Japan toward becoming a military state, which is extremely dangerous, he said.

Many young people were also seen among the crowd. A woman in her 20s said she feared that moves to revise Japan's pacifist Constitution would undermine peace. Japan, which once waged wars and invaded China, was a country that destroyed peace, she said, noting that Article 9 of the Constitution must be protected.

Japan's Constitution, which took effect in 1947, is often referred to as the pacifist Constitution because Article 9 states that the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes.

After being designated prime minister in a parliamentary vote earlier this month, Takaichi reiterated her commitment to constitutional revision, sparking concern across various sectors of Japanese society.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsISL 2025-26: Daniel Chima scores first of the season but Chennaiyin fall to narrow loss against Inter Kashi

Other SportsBadminton Asia C'ships: Dhruv-Tanisha lead India's charge with win

CricketMI vs RR, IPL 2026 Today Match LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where To Watch Rajasthan Royals vs Mumbai Indians Match

Other SportsIFL 2025-26: Dempo secure first win of the season against Shillong Lajong

NationalBengal: Murshidabad key for Trinamool despite voter roll deletions

International Realted Stories

International"Radiological catastrophe": Russia slams US-Israeli "aggression" against Iran's nuclear sites

InternationalIran faces 8pm deadline from the US: White House

InternationalInternational drug racket busted in Rajasthan's Barmer; accused linked to Pakistani handler

InternationalBangladesh Foreign Minister arrives in India, visit to bolster bilateral ties

InternationalFaith in righteous cause will prevail over logic of brute force: Iran