Japan PM hopeful Takaichi avoids WWII shrine visit amid political tussle

The new leader of Japan’s governing party, Sanae Takaichi, has decided not to visit a controversial World War II shrine in Tokyo, as uncertainty remains over whether she will be appointed prime minister ahead of a visit by United States President Donald Trump before the end of the month.

Takaichi, 64, seen as an arch-conservative from the right of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), has previously visited the Yasukuni Shrine, including as a government minister.

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However, Takaichi opted on Friday to send an offering, and reports said she was likely to refrain from visiting in order not to antagonise the country’s neighbours whom Imperial Japan had occupied and committed atrocities against in the first half of the 20th century.

Past visits by top leaders to Yasukuni, which honours convicted war criminals, have angered China and South Korea. The last visit by a Japanese premier was in 2013 by the late Shinzo Abe, Takaichi’s mentor.

People visit Yasukuni Shrine on the 77th anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan, on August 15, 2022 [Issei Kato/Reuters]

Takaichi’s decision not to visit the shrine came as Japan’s former Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama, best known for making a statement apologising for atrocities Japan committed in Asia over the course of World War II, died aged 101.

Murayama, in office from 1994 to 1996, issued the 1995 “Murayama statement” on the 50th anniversary of Japan’s unconditional surrender.

Murayama died on Friday at a hospital in his hometown, Oita, in southwestern Japan, according to a statement from Mizuho Fukushima, head of Japan’s Social Democratic Party (SDP).

Hiroyuki Takano, secretary-general of the SDP in Oita, told the AFP news agency he had been informed that Murayama died of old age.

Political wrangling

Takaichi became LDP leader on October 4, but her aim to become Japan’s first female prime minister was derailed after the LDP’s coalition partner of 26 years, the Komeito party, pulled the plug on their alliance last week.

The LDP is now in talks about forming a different alliance, boosting Takaichi’s chances of becoming premier in a parliamentary vote that local media reports said will likely happen on Tuesday.

The clock is ticking for Takaichi to become Japan’s fifth prime minister in as many years with Trump’s impending visit.

Details of Washington and Tokyo’s trade deal remain unresolved and Trump – who had warm relations with Abe in his first term – wants Japan to stop Russian energy imports and boost defence spending.

Komeito said that the LDP has failed to tighten rules on party funding following a damaging slush fund scandal involving dodgy payments of millions of dollars.

The LDP this week began talks on forming a new coalition with the Japan Innovation Party instead.

The two parties would be two seats short of a majority but the alliance would still likely ensure that Takaichi succeeds in becoming premier.

A spanner in the works could be if opposition parties agreed on a rival candidate but talks earlier this week appeared to make little headway.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,331

Here is how things stand on Friday, October 17, 2025:

Fighting

  • Russia launched a large armoured assault with more than 20 armoured vehicles near the eastern Ukrainian town of Dobropillia, Ukraine’s Azov brigade said, adding that its forces repelled the attack.
  • Russia’s Defence Ministry said its forces carried out a massive overnight strike on Ukrainian gas infrastructure, which supports Kyiv’s military, in retaliation for what it said were Ukrainian attacks on civilian infrastructure.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia launched a barrage of more than 300 drones and 37 missiles in that attack. Ukraine’s state grid operator, Ukrenergo, has also introduced emergency power cuts in every region of the country.
  • Ukraine struck Russia’s Saratov oil refinery overnight, the Ukrainian military general staff said in a statement on Telegram.
  • Some 84,000 people are still without power in the Russian-held part of Ukraine’s Kherson region after Ukrainian strikes this week on energy infrastructure, according to Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed governor of the region.
  • Alexey Likhachev, the head of Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom, said a decision could be taken as early as Friday on a pause in fighting to enable repairs to power lines at the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station in Ukraine.
  • North Korean troops based in Russia are operating drones across the border into Ukraine on reconnaissance missions, the Ukrainian military said, the first time Kyiv has reported a battlefield role for North Koreans in months.

Ceasefire talks

  • In a surprise move, United States President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin have agreed to another summit on the war in Ukraine after the leaders held a more than two-hour phone conversation. Trump and Putin may meet within the next two weeks in Budapest, Hungary, Trump said after the conversation, which he called productive.
  • The Kremlin confirmed plans for the meeting, adding that Putin told Trump on the call that supplying US Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine would harm the peace process and damage ties.
  • US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will speak in the coming days to prepare the summit, Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said, adding that the timing would depend on how preparatory work progressed.
  • The development came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was headed to the White House on Friday to push for more military support. Zelenskyy said on the eve of those talks that momentum in the Middle East peace process would help end his country’s more than three-year-old war with Russia.

Europe

  • The European Commission has proposed four flagship European defence projects, including a counter-drone system and a plan to fortify the eastern border, as part of a drive to get the continent ready to defend itself by 2030.
  • The proposals, in a defence policy “roadmap”, reflect fears fuelled by the war in Ukraine that Russia may attack a European Union member in the coming years, and calls by President Trump for Europe to do more for its own security.

Sanctions

  • Britain has targeted Russia’s two largest oil companies, Lukoil and Rosneft, and 44 shadow fleet tankers in what it described as a new bid to tighten energy sanctions and choke off Kremlin revenues. Lukoil and Rosneft were designated under Britain’s Russia sanctions laws for their role in supporting the Russian government. They are subject to an asset freeze, director disqualification, transport restrictions and a ban on British trust services.
  • German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he would call for the EU to use Russian assets frozen in the West to provide a large loan to Ukraine to finance its war effort at the upcoming EU summit on October 23.
  • Canada and Britain have expressed interest in working on the EU idea of a reparations loan for Ukraine based on immobilised Russian assets, European Economic Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis told the Reuters news agency on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington.
  • Dombrovskis said he presented the idea of the EU loan, which could be up to 185 billion euros ($216.5bn) over two years, to G7 finance ministers.

What’s behind Pakistan’s latest crackdown on religious party TLP?

Islamabad, Pakistan – The provincial government of Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, is seeking federal approval to ban the far-right religious party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) amid a violent crackdown on the group’s protesters this week.

In a meeting chaired by Maryam Nawaz Sharif, the province’s chief minister and niece of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, officials approved what they described as “historic” and “extraordinary” decisions.

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The chief minister did not name the TLP, but a statement from her office said the ban would be sought against an “extremist” party, and added that those involved in inciting violence, spreading hatred and violating the law would be arrested “immediately”.

“The extremist party’s leadership will be placed in the Fourth Schedule of the Anti-Terrorism Act,” the provincial government statement said. The Fourth Schedule is a list of proscribed individuals suspected of terrorism and sectarianism under Pakistan’s antiterrorism legislation.

The announcement came four days after a large-scale predawn operation by law enforcement agencies on Monday to dismantle a TLP protest camp in Muridke, 60km (37 miles) from the provincial capital, Lahore.

Muridke made headlines earlier this year in May when India launched missiles on the town, targeting what it claimed were sanctuaries for Pakistan-based armed groups responsible for carrying out attacks on Indian territory.

Following the police operation against the TLP – a political party with a controversial and violent history – authorities said they detained more than 2,700 people, while another 2,800 were placed on an exit control list.

The party has led blasphemy-related protests in Pakistan, a highly sensitive topic in the Muslim-majority country, and has been accused of attacks against religious minorities, particularly Christians and Ahmadis.

Why was the TLP protesting?

United States President Donald Trump unveiled a 20-point plan on September 29, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu standing beside him, aimed at ending Israel’s two-year war on Gaza.

The plan, subsequently ratified by several countries, including Pakistan, on October 13, stipulated that the war would end immediately, with all captives held by Hamas in Gaza since October 7 – both alive and dead – returned within 72 hours, and Palestinian prisoners released.

The plan also stated that the Gaza Strip would be temporarily governed by a Palestinian technocratic government with no role for Hamas, and Israel would not annex Gaza. “The United States will work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) to immediately deploy in Gaza,” the plan added.

But the plan does not explicitly commit to a Palestinian state, something that is a demand of most of the world – and has been a central part of Pakistan’s policy in the Middle East.

Following Trump’s announcement, the TLP declared its intention to march, stating it did not accept the peace agreement. The party called the peace agreement a “conspiracy to subjugate the Palestinian people” that demanded a protest.

According to the TLP and its chief, Saad Hussain Rizvi, the “Al-Aqsa Gaza March” was scheduled to begin from Lahore, the party’s base, on October 10.

The objective was to march on the main national highway from Lahore towards the capital Islamabad, where the party intended to stage a demonstration outside the US embassy.

“The purpose of this march was to express solidarity with the oppressed people of Palestine and the situation in Gaza only,” a TLP spokesperson who was not present at the protest site told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity due to fear of arrest.

Police fire shots to disperse supporters of the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan in Muridke, Pakistan, on October 13, 2025 [A Hussain/EPA]

How did the protest unfold?

As TLP workers gathered in Lahore last Friday, Rizvi addressed a large rally of thousands, urging them to break through all obstacles placed by authorities and carry out their march.

Lahore police had placed numerous containers on the main highway and dug trenches to break the party’s momentum.

However, despite clashes with police, TLP workers managed to break free and reach Muridke by Sunday.

Authorities allege that workers from the party injured several dozen police officials in clashes as they made their way towards Islamabad.

Ehtesham Shami, a local journalist covering the TLP march in Muridke, said party workers arrived in the city despite blockades everywhere that made movement extremely difficult.

Looking at the number of law enforcement personnel present in Muridke and surrounding areas, it was evident that an operation would be launched against the party, and this was even conveyed by authorities to TLP leaders, Shami said.

“However, as workers remained present, around 2am the police started its operation, firing the first tear gas shell,” Shami, who was present at the scene, told Al Jazeera.

He said clashes between the two sides continued for several hours until dawn, during which TLP workers also engaged in counterattacks against police personnel, appearing in “small groups, moving swiftly and acting rapidly”.

The TLP official, one of numerous spokespeople for the party, however, denied any such counterattacks, blaming authorities for “wanton violence against peaceful protesters”, saying the party believes in peaceful protest.

Punjab police said in a statement on Monday that at least one police official was killed in the clashes, while dozens of police personnel were injured, some critically.

Disputed casualty figures

Since the operation ended on Monday, TLP-affiliated social media accounts have claimed the police action resulted in hundreds of deaths among their workers.

While the official government statement said only three TLP workers were killed, the TLP official denied the count.

“Hundreds of our workers were killed, and their bodies were removed from the scene by the officials to hide their crimes,” he claimed, without providing evidence.

The claims have been amplified by several leaders of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the largest opposition party in Pakistan, which itself conducted several operations against the TLP during its tenure between 2018 and 2022.

PTI has faced a state-led crackdown since being ousted from power in April 2022. Last November, at least 12 of their workers were killed in a protest in Islamabad.

Amid the dispute over the death toll in the clashes between law enforcement officials and the TLP in Muridke, Fawad Chaudhry, a former federal information minister under the PTI government, also told Al Jazeera he reached out to several local community leaders and politicians in various cities near Lahore from where TLP workers gathered.

“I spoke to more than two dozen community leaders to find out about any deaths in their constituency following the crackdown on TLP, but apart from one confirmation, nobody else had anything to add,” he said.

What is the TLP?

TLP, a group following the Barelvi school of Sunni Islam, was formed in 2015 by Khadim Hussain Rizvi, the wheelchair-bound father of the current leader. The Barelvi school has roots in Bareilly in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

epa12446810 Supporters of the Islamic political party Tehrik-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) rally towards the US embassy during an anti-Israel protest at Islamabad, in Lahore, Pakistan, 11 October 2025. Violent clashes erupted in Lahore late on 08 October after police raided TLP's headquarters to arrest its chief, Saad Rizvi. The crackdown followed TLP's announcement of an anti-Israel protest outside the US embassy in Islamabad on 10 October, prompting authorities to place containers at Faizabad Interchange. EPA/A. HUSSAIN
Supporters of the religio-political party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) march during their protest rally in Lahore, Pakistan, on October 11, 2025 [A Hussain/EPA]

The party made its name as a far-right, populist religio-political movement primarily through controversial and violent protests focusing on blasphemy, demanding immediate death for anybody accused of the offence.

The party came to prominence for its vehement support for Mumtaz Qadri, a police constable who shot Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer in 2011 for expressing sympathetic sentiments towards Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman accused of blasphemy.

The party has continued to mobilise around issues of religious sanctity, with its first major protest taking place in November 2017.

Subsequently, they carried out similar, often violent, protests in 2020 and 2021 over the publication of perceived blasphemous caricatures, during which several police officials were killed.

The TLP contested both the 2018 and 2024 elections. While they never secured a seat in the national assembly, they managed to win more than two million votes in both elections.

In 2018, the party placed fifth in total votes and won three provincial seats from Sindh. In 2024, it ranked fourth in total votes while winning one provincial seat in Punjab.

The party’s founder, Rizvi, died in November 2020 from natural causes at the age of 54. After his death, the party was headed by Saad Hussain Rizvi, who was later joined by his younger brother, Anas Hussain Rizvi.

Blasphemy is an extremely sensitive topic in Muslim-majority Pakistan, with at least 85 people murdered in relation to the allegations since 1990, according to local media and researchers. As of 2023, at least 53 people are in custody across Pakistan on blasphemy charges, according to the US Commission on International Religious Freedom.

The rise of TLP has seen a drastic increase in violence and blasphemy cases filed across the country.

The TLP has particularly targeted Ahmadis, a religious minority in Pakistan that considers itself Muslim but was officially declared “non-Muslim” in 1974 through a constitutional amendment. The party has often targeted their places of worship and desecrated graveyards.

Where are the Rizvi brothers?

Following the police crackdown on Monday morning, the party’s leaders, brothers Saad and Anas, have been missing.

FILE PHOTO: Saad Hussain Rizvi, chief of Islamist political party Tehrik-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP), gestures to his supporters after being released from jail in Lahore, Pakistan, November 18, 2021. REUTERS/Mohsin Raza/File Photo
Saad Hussain Rizvi, chief of TLP, gestures to his supporters after being released from jail in Lahore, Pakistan, November 18, 2021 [Mohsin Raza/Reuters]

While social media was rife with rumours of at least one brother’s death, with both allegedly having been hit by bullets, Punjab police denied any such reports.

Muhammad Faisal Kamran, a senior Lahore police official, told a news channel on October 14 that neither brother was in police custody, though he added that officials had managed to “trace them” and would arrest them soon.

Shami, the journalist, said that while police deny having custody of both brothers, it appears they will declare their formal arrest within a few days.

“Maybe the purpose of not immediately bringing them forward at this time is to reduce the anger among their supporters and ensure that the situation remains under control, as there is also an impression that if both brothers were arrested and immediately presented, their workers could become agitated,” he told Al Jazeera.

Did the TLP miscalculate?

For a party that has singularly focused on blasphemy-related issues for its brand of “agitational politics”, some analysts say the TLP tried to reorient its approach but miscalculated.

Abdul Basit, a scholar at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Singapore’s S Rajaratnam School of International Studies, has followed the group closely since its emergence.

The analyst says the party has always believed in confrontational politics, but perhaps with this protest, it tried its hand at other issues.

“Being agitational is part of the TLP DNA, and it tried to move away from blasphemy-related activism,” he told Al Jazeera.

Chaudhry, the former federal minister under the PTI tenure, said there was no public display of any resentment against the Gaza peace deal, making it unclear why the party chose to latch onto this topic.

However, the politician endorsed state action against the far-right party.

“TLP chants slogans of ‘separate the head from the body of a blasphemer’. They set fire on property of people and target minorities. Should they be garlanded for these violent actions? Should politics allow space for parties that endorse beheading people?” Chaudhry asked.

Basit, on the other hand, said every political group or social movement has a “democratic, fundamental right to protest”, regardless of their agenda.

“Now the question is whether the TLP’s protest was peaceful or not. The party does not have any credit due to their tainted past of conducting violent protests. Having said that, there are certainly less violent ways to control a crowd and the state, arguably, used excessive violence,” the scholar said.

Police officers and supporters of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) run amid tear gas fired by police during a solidarity march for Gaza in Lahore, Pakistan, October 10, 2025. REUTERS/Mohsin Raza TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Police officers and supporters of TLP run amid tear gas fired by police during a solidarity march for Gaza in Lahore, Pakistan, October 10, 2025 [Mohsin Raza/Reuters]

Muhammad Amir Rana, a security analyst and director of the Pak Institute of Peace Studies (PIPS), said that the TLP had never previously been held accountable for violence.

“In the past protests, TLP often perpetrated violence against Punjab police personnel, with several police officers dying during different protests. This time, with the state’s full backing, police had the opportunity to go after the party,” Islamabad-based Rana told Al Jazeera.

Did TLP’s Gaza protest fail to resonate with the public?

Public opposition in Pakistan to Trump’s announced Gaza deal has been largely muted, despite criticism and questions about the deal’s practicality.

Pakistan’s mainstream religious parties, Jamaat-e-Islami and Jamiat Ulema Islam-Fazal, held rallies in early October – but they focused on expressing “solidarity for the people of Gaza”, rather than questioning the deal or its conditions.

“Perhaps, TLP felt that their space and political relevance was reducing, so they wanted to hold a protest to get some public attention,” Rana, the security analyst, said.

Basit, the Singapore-based expert, said that while Palestine is also an emotive issue in Pakistan, the TLP’s attempt to galvanise support around the issue had failed.

“No other political or religious group, so far, has publicly protested against the deal or Pakistan’s involvement. Had there been other groups joining their rally, it could have shown there was public sentiment against the deal, serious enough for people to be on the streets, but that was not the case,” he pointed out.

Kanchha Sherpa, last member of first Mount Everest expedition, dies at 92

Kanchha Sherpa, the last surviving member of the mountaineering team that first reached the summit of Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak, has died in Nepal at the age of 92.

The Nepal Mountaineering Association described Kanchha Sherpa as a “historic and legendary figure” who died at his home in Kapan in the Kathmandu district of Nepal on Thursday.

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“We are deeply saddened by the passing of Mr Kanchha Sherpa, the last surviving member of the first successful summit of Mount Everest in 1953,” the association’s president, Fur Gelje Sherpa, said in a statement.

“His absence leaves an irreplaceable loss … He will be dearly missed,” the president said.

Tenzing Chogyal Sherpa said his grandfather had “some issues with his throat” recently. “Otherwise, he had no major health issue for a person of his age,” his grandson told the DPA news agency.

Kanchha Sherpa was among the 35 members of the team that helped Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay and New Zealander Edmund Hillary reach the 8,849-metre (29,032-foot) peak of Everest on May 29, 1953.

He was one of three Sherpas to reach the final camp before the summit with Hillary and Tenzing.

Hillary and Norgay, both 39 at the time, became the first to reach the summit on May 29, 1953.

Kanchha was born in 1933 in the village of Namche in the Everest foothills, when most members of Nepal’s Sherpa community – a Himalayan people renowned as mountaineering guides – worked in farming.

He spent his childhood and young adult years earning a meagre living through trading potatoes in neighbouring Tibet. When he and several friends later visited Darjeeling, India, he was persuaded to train for mountain climbing, and he began working with foreign trekkers.

His father’s friendship with Tenzing Norgay helped Kanchha Sherpa secure a job as a high-altitude porter for Tenzing and Hillary.

Kanchha Sherpa worked in the Himalayan mountains for two more decades after the 1953 expedition, until his wife asked him to stop the dangerous journeys after many of his friends died assisting other climbing treks, his family said.

He never actually climbed to the summit of Everest himself, as his wife considered it too risky, he said in a March 2024 interview with The Associated Press, and he forbade his children from becoming mountaineers.

Later in his life, Kanchha had mixed feelings about Everest’s fate as an adventure tourism destination where thousands of people have made the ascent to the peak and the mountain has become known for overcrowding and discarded litter.

National Geographic Society said in an article published in April that more than 600 people attempt to summit Everest every climbing season, and the mountain has “grown increasingly polluted”, leading to the contamination of the local watershed, which threatens the health of local people.

“The mountain has become so overcrowded that oftentimes climbers have to stand in line for hours in freezing cold conditions to reach the top”, and when climbers finally reach the summit, “there is barely room to stand because of overcrowding”, the magazine said.

In 2024, Kanchha Sherpa urged people to respect the mountain, revered as the mother goddess Qomolangma among the Sherpas.

“It would be better for the mountain to reduce the number of climbers,” he said.

“Qomolangma is the biggest god for the Sherpas,” Kanchha added.

“But people smoke and eat meat and throw them on the mountain.”