Shinzo Abe: World leaders express shock over assassination

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Barack Obama and Shinzo Abe in 2016Image source, Getty Images

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Barack Obama and Shinzo Abe in 2016

Tributes have been pouring in from shocked world leaders after Japan's former prime minister Shinzo Abe was assassinated.

Abe was shot at twice while he was giving a speech on a street in the city of Nara on Friday morning.

The suspect, named as Tetsuya Yamagami, admitted shooting Abe with a homemade gun and said he had a grudge against a "specific organisation", police said.

Both allies and traditional rivals of Abe have offered their condolences.

Current and former US presidents paid tribute to Abe.

Joe Biden said he was "stunned, outraged and deeply saddened" by Abe's death.

"Even at the moment he was attacked, he was engaged in the work of democracy," the president said.

Mr Biden ordered US flags to be flown at half-staff over the weekend in tribute to Abe.

Image source, Getty Images

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Trump and Abe played golf together in 2019

Donald Trump said Abe "was a unifier like no other" and said he hoped the suspect will "be dealt with swiftly and harshly".

Barack Obama recalled "the moving experience of traveling to Hiroshima and Pearl Harbor together".

Image source, Getty Images

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The Queen said she was deeply saddened by the news

The Queen said she was "deeply saddened" by the news, adding that she had "fond memories of meeting Mr Abe and his wife during their visit to the United Kingdom in 2016".

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson called it a "despicable attack" and said that the UK stands with the Japanese people at a "dark and sad time".

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called it a "brutal assassination".

"This heinous act of violence has no excuse," he tweeted.

Image source, Getty Images

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Putin called Abe "an outstanding statesman"

Russia's Vladimir Putin said he contacted Abe's family to offer his condolences.

Abe was an "outstanding statesman" who "did a lot for the development of good neighbourly relations between our countries", Mr Putin said.

Tributes have also been paid by countries that had a frostier relationship with Abe and Japan.

China and South Korea have historically had complicated and fraught relationships with Japan. Abe, known for his military hawkishness, was unpopular with citizens of both countries during his term in office.

Comments gloating over the attack on Abe have dominated Chinese social media, and have also surfaced on Korean platforms.

But South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol called Abe's killing an "unacceptable act of crime".

"I extend my consolation and condolences to his family and the Japanese people for having lost their longest-serving prime minister and a respected politician," Mr Yoon said.

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Watch: 'I still can't believe it' - Mourners gather on street where Shinzo Abe was shot

Chinese President Xi Jinping has not made a statement, but Beijing's embassy in Japan said Abe made "contributions towards improving China-Japan relations during his term".

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