Japan ramps up G7 security after PM attacks
Published: 04:05 PM,May 17,2023 | EDITED : 07:05 PM,May 17,2023
HIROSHIMA: Security is tight at every G7 summit, but this year's host Japan has more to prove than most, after an attack last month on the prime minister and the 2022 assassination of ex-premier Shinzo Abe.
Some 24,000 security personnel are reportedly being deployed to Hiroshima during the summit, most dispatched from other parts of the country.
Well ahead of the May 19-21 talks, patrolling police have been weaving between tour groups in the western city's famed Peace Park.
The measures are likely to be closely scrutinised less than a year after a gunman assassinated former prime minister Abe as he campaigned in the city of Nara. — AFP
Some 24,000 security personnel are reportedly being deployed to Hiroshima during the summit, most dispatched from other parts of the country.
Well ahead of the May 19-21 talks, patrolling police have been weaving between tour groups in the western city's famed Peace Park.
The measures are likely to be closely scrutinised less than a year after a gunman assassinated former prime minister Abe as he campaigned in the city of Nara. — AFP