TOKYO - Half of Japanese don't want their next prime minister to visit a 
Tokyo war shrine at the center of a diplomatic row with Japan's East Asian 
neighbors, according to a newspaper poll published Wednesday. 
 
 
 |  The Yasukuni Shrine in 
 Tokyo. Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso, a candidate for the 
 premiership, has called for the Yasukuni war shrine to be put under state 
 control and stripped of its religious affiliation so even the emperor 
 could visit. [AFP\File]
 | 
A survey in the Yomiuri daily, Japan's largest newspaper, showed 50.3 percent 
of 3,000 respondents felt that whoever replaces Prime Minister Junichiro 
Koizumi, who is set to step down in September should not visit Yasukuni Shrine. 
Another 40.4 percent supported the visits, while the remaining 9.4 percent 
were undecided, the August 5-6 poll found. 
China and other Asian countries say Yasukuni, which honors Japan's 2.5 
million war dead, including 14 convicted World War II war criminals, glorifies 
Japan's militarist past. 
Opposition to the shrine visits has increased since the newspaper's last 
survey on the issue in June, Yomiuri said. Other recent newspaper polls on the 
issue have produced similar results. 
The Yomiuri poll, which gave no margin of error, also showed that 48.6 
percent of respondents felt Koizumi should not visit the shrine again before he 
steps down. 
Another 43.1 percent felt he should, while the remaing 8.4 percent were 
undecided, it said. 
Koizumi has visited the shrine every year since becoming prime minister in 
2001, keeping a pledge he made during his successful campaign for the 
premiership. 
On Tuesday, Koizumi suggested he plans to worship again at the controversial 
shrine, to mark the August 15 anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender. 
South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon, in Tokyo for talks with Japanese 
officials, demanded Koizumi refrain. 
Ban was scheduled to meet the frontrunner to succeed Koizumi, Chief Cabinet 
Secretary Shinzo Abe, Wednesday morning. 
Abe, who has supported Koizumi's visits, reportedly worshipped at the shrine 
in secret earlier this year. But he has refused to confirm those reports or say 
whether he would go again as prime minister.