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Japan’s cabinet rocked by new claims of links to neo-Nazis who target the ethnic Korean population

Raphael

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Japan’s cabinet rocked by new claims of links to neo-Nazis who target the ethnic Korean population - Asia - World - The Independent

Japan’s government is weathering accusations of links to far-right groups that promote racism and hate speech.

Several members of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s cabinet, including the Police Minister, have been forced to deny their neo-Nazi links after photographs surfaced of them posing with far-right figures.

In the latest episode, Eriko Yamatani, head of the National Public Safety Commission, rejected claims that she had a 15-year association with the former leader of an ultra-right group that spouts crude racism against Koreans.

The group, Zaitokukai, wants Japan to expel its ethnic Korean population. It has 12,000 members, many of whom descend on Korean communities in Japanese cities, screaming slogans such as “cockroaches” and “kill, kill Koreans”.

Police have mostly turned a blind eye to the group but in July, the high court in Osaka ordered Zaitokukai to stop its tirades against an elementary school in Kyoto with links to North Korea. The group was ordered to pay 12 million yen (£68,000) to the school in compensation.

This month, a magazine published a 2009 photo of Ms Yamatani posing with Shigeo Masuki, former leader of Zaitokukai. Mr Masuki says he has known Ms Yamatani for 15 years. But at the Tokyo Foreign Correspondents’ Club, the Police Minister said she had “no memory” of where or how many times the two had met.

When invited to distance herself from the group, Ms Yamatani said it was “not appropriate” for her to comment on specific groups and opted instead to lecture journalists on Japanese values. “Japan has a long history of placing great value on the idea of harmony and respecting the rights of everyone,” she said.

About 500,000 non-naturalised Koreans live in Japan, remnants of a larger community that peaked decades ago. They have long been subjected to racial abuse. In one infamous episode, thousands were lynched in a pogrom after the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923.

Two more of Mr Abe’s new appointees have also been accused of neo-Nazi links. Sanae Takaichi, the Internal Affairs Minister, and Tomomi Inada, Policy Chief of the ruling Liberal Democrats, appeared in separate, undated photos with the leader of the National Socialist Japanese Workers Party, Kazunari Yamada.

In online videos, Mr Yamada can be seen in street demonstrations wearing a modified swastika. Ms Takaichi also appeared in a magazine advert endorsing a 1994 book titled Hitler’s Election Strategy. Both ministers deny endorsing Nazi ideology.

Mr Abe’s government has raised eyebrows with its far-right profile. Sixteen cabinet members belong to the League for Going to Worship Together at Yasukuni, a Tokyo shrine that honours leaders executed for war crimes. Sixteen support Nihon Kaigi, a nationalist think-tank that advocates a return to “traditional values” and rejects Japan’s “apology diplomacy” for its wartime misdeeds.

Many belong to a parliamentary association that wants school history lessons to put a better gloss on Japan’s militarist era. They deny many wartime atrocities. Most of the cabinet is also associated with the Shinto Political Alliance Diet Members Association, a right-wing lobby group that promotes traditional values.

In August, Mr Abe sparked controversy when he paid tribute to soldiers, including war criminals, who gave their lives for “the foundation of the fatherland”. The tribute was sent to a temple housing a monument to 1,000 “martyrs” who fought in the Second World War. A spokesman said the Prime Minister acted in a “private capacity” when he sent the message.
 
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Japan’s cabinet rocked by new claims of links to neo-Nazis who target the ethnic Korean population - Asia - World - The Independent

Japan’s government is weathering accusations of links to far-right groups that promote racism and hate speech.

Several members of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s cabinet, including the Police Minister, have been forced to deny their neo-Nazi links after photographs surfaced of them posing with far-right figures.

In the latest episode, Eriko Yamatani, head of the National Public Safety Commission, rejected claims that she had a 15-year association with the former leader of an ultra-right group that spouts crude racism against Koreans.

The group, Zaitokukai, wants Japan to expel its ethnic Korean population. It has 12,000 members, many of whom descend on Korean communities in Japanese cities, screaming slogans such as “cockroaches” and “kill, kill Koreans”.

Police have mostly turned a blind eye to the group but in July, the high court in Osaka ordered Zaitokukai to stop its tirades against an elementary school in Kyoto with links to North Korea. The group was ordered to pay 12 million yen (£68,000) to the school in compensation.

This month, a magazine published a 2009 photo of Ms Yamatani posing with Shigeo Masuki, former leader of Zaitokukai. Mr Masuki says he has known Ms Yamatani for 15 years. But at the Tokyo Foreign Correspondents’ Club, the Police Minister said she had “no memory” of where or how many times the two had met.

When invited to distance herself from the group, Ms Yamatani said it was “not appropriate” for her to comment on specific groups and opted instead to lecture journalists on Japanese values. “Japan has a long history of placing great value on the idea of harmony and respecting the rights of everyone,” she said.

About 500,000 non-naturalised Koreans live in Japan, remnants of a larger community that peaked decades ago. They have long been subjected to racial abuse. In one infamous episode, thousands were lynched in a pogrom after the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923.

Two more of Mr Abe’s new appointees have also been accused of neo-Nazi links. Sanae Takaichi, the Internal Affairs Minister, and Tomomi Inada, Policy Chief of the ruling Liberal Democrats, appeared in separate, undated photos with the leader of the National Socialist Japanese Workers Party, Kazunari Yamada.

In online videos, Mr Yamada can be seen in street demonstrations wearing a modified swastika. Ms Takaichi also appeared in a magazine advert endorsing a 1994 book titled Hitler’s Election Strategy. Both ministers deny endorsing Nazi ideology.

Mr Abe’s government has raised eyebrows with its far-right profile. Sixteen cabinet members belong to the League for Going to Worship Together at Yasukuni, a Tokyo shrine that honours leaders executed for war crimes. Sixteen support Nihon Kaigi, a nationalist think-tank that advocates a return to “traditional values” and rejects Japan’s “apology diplomacy” for its wartime misdeeds.

Many belong to a parliamentary association that wants school history lessons to put a better gloss on Japan’s militarist era. They deny many wartime atrocities. Most of the cabinet is also associated with the Shinto Political Alliance Diet Members Association, a right-wing lobby group that promotes traditional values.

In August, Mr Abe sparked controversy when he paid tribute to soldiers, including war criminals, who gave their lives for “the foundation of the fatherland”. The tribute was sent to a temple housing a monument to 1,000 “martyrs” who fought in the Second World War. A spokesman said the Prime Minister acted in a “private capacity” when he sent the message.

How embarrassing. :disagree: But when you have a filthy mongrel like Abe leading the pack, it's not surprising when the rest of the dogs are mangy mutts as well.
 
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Better Hitler then any kind of communist like Mao or Stalin
 
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Japan’s cabinet rocked by new claims of links to neo-Nazis who target the ethnic Korean population - Asia - World - The Independent

Japan’s government is weathering accusations of links to far-right groups that promote racism and hate speech.

Several members of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s cabinet, including the Police Minister, have been forced to deny their neo-Nazi links after photographs surfaced of them posing with far-right figures.

In the latest episode, Eriko Yamatani, head of the National Public Safety Commission, rejected claims that she had a 15-year association with the former leader of an ultra-right group that spouts crude racism against Koreans.

The group, Zaitokukai, wants Japan to expel its ethnic Korean population. It has 12,000 members, many of whom descend on Korean communities in Japanese cities, screaming slogans such as “cockroaches” and “kill, kill Koreans”.

Police have mostly turned a blind eye to the group but in July, the high court in Osaka ordered Zaitokukai to stop its tirades against an elementary school in Kyoto with links to North Korea. The group was ordered to pay 12 million yen (£68,000) to the school in compensation.

This month, a magazine published a 2009 photo of Ms Yamatani posing with Shigeo Masuki, former leader of Zaitokukai. Mr Masuki says he has known Ms Yamatani for 15 years. But at the Tokyo Foreign Correspondents’ Club, the Police Minister said she had “no memory” of where or how many times the two had met.

When invited to distance herself from the group, Ms Yamatani said it was “not appropriate” for her to comment on specific groups and opted instead to lecture journalists on Japanese values. “Japan has a long history of placing great value on the idea of harmony and respecting the rights of everyone,” she said.

About 500,000 non-naturalised Koreans live in Japan, remnants of a larger community that peaked decades ago. They have long been subjected to racial abuse. In one infamous episode, thousands were lynched in a pogrom after the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923.

Two more of Mr Abe’s new appointees have also been accused of neo-Nazi links. Sanae Takaichi, the Internal Affairs Minister, and Tomomi Inada, Policy Chief of the ruling Liberal Democrats, appeared in separate, undated photos with the leader of the National Socialist Japanese Workers Party, Kazunari Yamada.

In online videos, Mr Yamada can be seen in street demonstrations wearing a modified swastika. Ms Takaichi also appeared in a magazine advert endorsing a 1994 book titled Hitler’s Election Strategy. Both ministers deny endorsing Nazi ideology.

Mr Abe’s government has raised eyebrows with its far-right profile. Sixteen cabinet members belong to the League for Going to Worship Together at Yasukuni, a Tokyo shrine that honours leaders executed for war crimes. Sixteen support Nihon Kaigi, a nationalist think-tank that advocates a return to “traditional values” and rejects Japan’s “apology diplomacy” for its wartime misdeeds.

Many belong to a parliamentary association that wants school history lessons to put a better gloss on Japan’s militarist era. They deny many wartime atrocities. Most of the cabinet is also associated with the Shinto Political Alliance Diet Members Association, a right-wing lobby group that promotes traditional values.

In August, Mr Abe sparked controversy when he paid tribute to soldiers, including war criminals, who gave their lives for “the foundation of the fatherland”. The tribute was sent to a temple housing a monument to 1,000 “martyrs” who fought in the Second World War. A spokesman said the Prime Minister acted in a “private capacity” when he sent the message.

@Nihonjin1051 are you a closet member of Zaitokukai?
 
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So you're a self-loathing Jew who loves Hitler? Do your parents know this?
I just hate Stalin and Mao more because of personal reasons (and i never said i love Hitler he is also crap)
 
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I just hate Stalin and Mao more because of personal reasons (and i never said i love Hitler he is also crap)

Personal reasons? I don't think you were a citizen of China before 1976, so Mao could not have personally affected you. Are saying you were a USSR citizen before 1953 and Stalin personally affected/harmed you?
 
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Personal reasons? I don't think you were a citizen of China before 1976, so Mao could not have personally affected you. Are saying you were a USSR citizen before 1953 and Stalin personally affected/harmed you?
Stalin harmed my family and my people in a way that it can be considered a genocide.
And Mao is just because of my general hatred of communist and that he is in many ways similar to Stalin
(And like i said Hitler was also an ***)
 
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Stalin harmed my family and my people in a way that it can be considered a genocide.
And Mao is just because of my general hatred of communist and that he is in many ways similar to Stalin
(And like i said Hitler was also an ***)

I'm sorry to hear that. But Stalin set up a Jewish Autonomous Oblast. Doesn't sound like the actions of someone inclined to genocide.
 
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I'm sorry to hear that. But Stalin set up a Jewish Autonomous Oblast. Doesn't sound like the actions of someone inclined to genocide.
Thank you
But im not speaking about my Jewish part (since im only partly jewish) eventhough Stalin sold many of us to Hitler to make himself look better
 
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