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Yukihiko Ikeda
Japanese diplomat

Yukihiko Ikeda

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Japanese diplomat
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
13 May 1937, Kōbe, Hyōgo Prefecture, Kansai region, Japan
Death
28 January 2004, Tokyo, Japan (aged 66 years)
Age
66 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Yukihiko Ikeda (池田 行彦, Ikeda Yukihiro, 13 May 1937 – 28 January 2004) was a Japanese bureaucrat and the Liberal Democratic Party politician who served as foreign minister. He was in office from 11 January 1996 to 11 September 1997. Ikeda was known to be "Mr. No" in the political life.

Early life and education

Ikeda was born in Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture, on 13 May 1937. Following the death of his father in 1944, he moved to Nakajima Honmachi, Hiroshima where his father's family lived. Ikeda studied law at the University of Tokyo and graduated in March 1961.

Career

with members of First Hashimoto Cabinet (at the Prime Minister's Official Residence on January 11, 1996)

Ikeda joined the ministry of finance in 1961 and worked as bureaucrat there. Then he became a member of the House of Representatives in 1976 following his membership to the LDP. He won the largest number of votes (55,027) in Hiroshima Prefecture's 2nd electoral district in the 1976 general election. He served as lawmaker ten times until his retirement. He held key positions in the LDP and was its defense agency chief. His other posts included chairman of the LDP's decision-making general council and head of the policy research council. He was appointed defense minister on 29 December 1990, replacing Yozo Ishikawa in the post. He served in the post until 5 November 1991 and was succeeded by Sohei Miyashita.

Ikeda's second tenure as foreign minister was from 11 January 1996 to 11 September 1997 in the coalition government headed by the LDP politician Ryutaro Hashimoto. Ikeda replaced Yōhei Kōno as foreign minister. Upon the construction of a wharf facility in Takeshima/Dokdo by the South Korean government at the beginning of 1996, Ikeda protested over the construction and demanded that the South Korean government should stop it. His remarks led to angry public demonstrations in Seoul. He led Japan's attempts to solve the hostage crisis in Peru in the 1990s. Ikeda was replaced by Keizō Obuchi as foreign minister on 11 September 1997.

Later Ikeda became the policy chief or top policy planner of the LDP in 1998. He was part of Koichi Kato's faction in the LDP.

Personal life and death

Ikeda was son-in-law of former Japanese prime minister Hayato Ikeda. He married Noriko Ikeda in May 1969, and took his wife's family name.

Ikeda died of rectum cancer in Tokyo on 28 January 2004 at age 66.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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