The G7 Demanded WHO Reform and Questioned China――The True Nature of NHK, Which Failed to Report It
Referring to a Sankei Shimbun article, this piece discusses how G7 leaders demanded a full review and reform of WHO and raised serious questions toward China over the origin and handling of the novel coronavirus. It highlights remarks by Britain’s Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab and French President Emmanuel Macron, while criticizing NHK’s pro-China reporting stance for failing to report these crucial facts.
April 19, 2020
Britain expressed the view that, regarding its relationship with China, the place where the novel coronavirus originated, “when the coronavirus crisis is over, we cannot return to business as usual.”
The following is from yesterday’s Sankei Shimbun article.
NHK yesterday did not report this fact at all.
NHK, which keeps the Japan branch of CCTV inside its headquarters, calls itself a public broadcaster, replacing the fact that it is Japan’s state broadcaster with that phrase.
It calls mere employees, who do not even possess the qualifications of journalists, “anchors” and the like.
While violating every day the Broadcast Act that reporting organizations must observe, it continues to wield anti-government sentiment and pseudo-moralism from a position as if it were an omniscient and omnipotent god.
But the reality is that it is a running dog of the CCP, and merely copies and reports the editorials of the Asahi Shimbun through a masochistic view of history and anti-Japanese thought.
The CCP that they keep inside their headquarters is a gangster that, with shamelessness, loudly proclaims propaganda and insists that it alone is right.
Since the people facing this gangster are, in reality, the kind of people described above, it is easier for the CCP to control NHK than to twist a baby’s arm.
“G7 demands WHO reform,” U.S. announces.
Questions toward China follow one after another.
Washington, Yoshinari Kurose; London, Kazumasa Bando.
The White House announced on the 16th that, at the same day’s video conference of the leaders of the Group of Seven advanced nations, chaired by President Trump, the leaders of each country called for “a full review and implementation of reform” regarding the response of the World Health Organization, WHO, to the novel coronavirus.
According to the White House, at the meeting, with the recognition that the G7 countries contribute many billions of dollars annually to WHO, the focus of discussion was “WHO’s lack of transparency and chronic failures in measures against the virus.”
Trump has criticized WHO as “pro-China” in its response to the novel coronavirus, announced on the 14th that the United States would suspend funding, and demanded organizational reform.
At the meeting as well, he is believed to have urged the leaders of each country to take firm measures toward WHO.
Foreign Secretary Raab, who attended the video conference in place of British Prime Minister Johnson, who was recuperating after being infected with the novel coronavirus, stated at a press conference after the meeting on the 16th that, regarding relations with China, the place where the novel coronavirus originated, “when the coronavirus crisis is over, we cannot return to business as usual.”
He also said that, regarding the outbreak of the virus and the response to it, “China must answer hard questions,” emphasizing the need to pursue China.
French President Macron also stated in an interview with the electronic edition of the British newspaper Financial Times on the 16th, regarding the initial spread of infection in China, “There are clearly things that happened that we do not know about,” suggesting that the Chinese government concealed information.
Furthermore, he pointed out that there is no comparison between a country where information flows freely and citizens can criticize the government, and a country where the truth is hidden.
He argued that it is “too naive” to say that China handled the matter better.
*The news department of NHK did not report at all the fact that the leaders of the G7 made such statements toward China.
With this article, all Japanese people must recognize the correctness of my argument that NHK’s news department is completely under Chinese operations.*