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As new Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe flew out on Sunday for visits to China and South Korea, his wife didn't just accompany him -- the two held hands going up the steps of the government plane.
![]() Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (L) waves with first lady Akie Abe at Tokyo's Haneda airport, October 8, 2006, as he boards a plane for his two-day-visit to China and South Korea. [Reuters] |
Young, stylish and a student of the Korean language, Akie Abe, 44, is not only Japan's first "first lady" in more than five years, she may be a new type of prime minister's wife altogether.
She has already attracted an unusual amount of media attention in Japan, where the wives of most prime ministers have kept such low profiles that few people even knew their names. Abe's predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, was divorced.
Now there is speculation that Akie, a former DJ and fan of South Korean television dramas who is known to take an occasional drink, may help soften her husband's conservative image overseas.
Dressed in a chic grey suit over a black shirt, her hair cut fashionably short, Akie twined hands with her husband -- at 52, Japan's youngest prime minister since World War Two -- as they boarded the plane for Beijing.
Wives of previous prime ministers, if they travelled with their husbands at all, tended to walk slightly behind.
Yet despite their low national profiles, many of Japan's first wives played active roles bolstering support in their home constituencies while their spouses remained in Tokyo, devoting themselves to policy.
This was a role that Akie, daughter of the president of a candy maker and an employee at a top ad agency before her marriage, took some time to master, according to reports in women's magazines that have devoted pages to Akie since her husband became prime minister last month.
She was rather cool to the idea when an acquaintance offered to introduce her to Abe and showed up late for the meeting, the story goes. Abe, immediately smitten, wooed her with flowers, and they married in 1987.
"I consult with her about many things," Abe said on TV shortly before becoming prime minister. "She's the person who understands me the best."
Akie is now popular in Abe's district, where her fondness for an occasional drink -- in contrast to her husband, who prefers sweets -- has made her a hit with his supporters.
Her sense of style is one factor behind his image as a snappy dresser, prompting him to say she should have been given the "Best Dressed" award he won in 2002.
Like many Japanese women, she is a fan of the South Korean television dramas that have made Korean actors and actresses celebrities in Japan. She even began learning Korean.
It is a skill she may put to good use in South Korea on Monday, where she is set to visit an elementary school while her husband discusses weighty matters of state.