Japanese first lady pays tribute in Pearl Harbor

Akie Abe, wife of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has visited Pearl Harbor for the first time to pay tribute to the victims of the Japanese attack 75 years ago
Akie Abe, wife of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has visited Pearl Harbor for the first time to pay tribute to the victims of the Japanese attack 75 years ago

TOKYO (AP) - Japan's first lady has visited Pearl Harbor in Hawaii for the first time to pay tribute to the victims of the Japanese attack 75 years ago.

Akie Abe said Monday she laid flowers and prayed at the USS Arizona Memorial.

"I offered flowers and a prayer," she wrote in the short message.

In one of several photos also posted on Facebook, Abe posed with an American veteran who survived the attack.

She did not elaborate on her visit, which came amid speculation about a visit by her husband, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the first lady was in Hawaii to attend an environmental conference. 

Speculation about a possible visit by Prime Minister Abe to Pearl Harbor has grown since U.S. President Barack Obama paid tribute in May to the victims of the U.S. bombing in Hiroshima.

No serving Japanese prime minister has visited Pearl Harbor.

"I've come to Hawaii many times, but I've never visited Pearl Harbor. As I think about the past war more often over the past year as we mark 70 years since the end of the war, I've felt strongly about visiting the site," Akie Abe was quoted as saying.

in an online "Gendai Business" magazine article linked to her Facebook entry. "I wanted to see the site myself and offer a prayer for those who died."