Japan's new prime minister apologised Sunday after one of his ministers was forced to quit for describing the no-go zone around the disaster-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant as a "town of death".
Yoshihiko Noda came under heavy fire after Yoshio Hachiro stepped down late Saturday as the minister of economy, industry and trade, a post responsible for tackling the nuclear crisis sparked by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.
"I profoundly apologise to the people of Fukushima for the incident which has hurt their hearts so much," the premier told reporters Sunday as the country marked six months after the multiple disaster.
"There has been no change in my belief that there will be no revival of Japan without the revival of Fukushima. My government will work hard as one to regain public trust in us."
But opposition leaders and newspaper editorials criticised Noda for picking Hachiro for a 17-member cabinet only nine days ago, with the now-departed minister among 10 members who were newcomers to ministerial jobs.
Hachiro's comments were only the latest in a series of gaffes by new ministers.
"The prime minister should be held responsible for the appointment in a cabinet which he claims to have the right people in the right positions," Nobuteru Ishihara, secretary general of the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party, told Japanese media. The business daily Nikkei said: "The prime minister cannot avoid being called to question over the appointment. The incident has become a major blow to the new administration which started with high approval ratings."
Noda, Japan's sixth new prime minister in five years, initially received approval ratings of around 60 percent.
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