The Foreign Ministry’s Troubling Ties with Anti-Japan NGOs — The Pathology of Postwar Diplomacy Exposed through Hideaki Uemura
Using the activities of Hideaki Uemura as a focal point, this chapter criticizes what it sees as a structure in which Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs maintained ties with anti-Japan-leaning individuals and organizations through UN reform forums and commemorative events marking Japan’s 50th anniversary in the United Nations.
It questions what kinds of people and NGOs the Japanese government, especially the Foreign Ministry, has cooperated with using taxpayers’ money, and highlights what it portrays as a serious flaw in postwar Japanese diplomacy.
2019-04-22
The other day, I stated that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had been foolish and worthless throughout the entire postwar period.
And that this was entirely correct was being proven in an even more astonishing way.
When I searched for Hideaki Uemura, who appeared in the previous chapter, I found that this man, clearly suspicious and inferable not to be a genuine Japanese, was such that.
If Japan had a CIA or an FBI, and if I were its director, then without a moment’s delay.
I would be investigating this man’s relationship with China and the Korean Peninsula.
Now, I was already appalled that he appears so brazenly on Wikipedia.
But the other day, I had stated that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had been foolish and worthless throughout the entire postwar period.
And that this was entirely correct was being proven in an even more astonishing way.
In August 2005.
In order to hold open discussions between the Japanese government and NGOs concerning UN reform, a new framework called the “Public Forum on UN Reform” was launched in joint sponsorship with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Japan International Volunteer Center (Kiyotaka Takahashi), and Peace Boat (Tetsu Kawasaki).
This forum continued until its 10th meeting in March 2012 and then came to a close, but its achievements and issues were compiled in March 2013 in the form of an external evaluation titled “Evaluation Report on the Public Forum on UN Reform.”
The evaluator was Seiji Endo, professor at Seikei University.
And it is posted on the following website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
(http://www.mofa.go.jp/mofaj/gaiko/un_kaikaku/pdfs/houkoku_201303.pdf)
In December 2006.
He was invited, as a representative of SGC, to attend the “50th Anniversary Ceremony of Japan’s Admission to the United Nations,” jointly hosted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the United Nations Association of Japan.
At the same time, there was also an article that made me convinced that this man was the mastermind behind inviting a farmer from Mozambique and a tottering old man from Norway to Japan to engage in anti-Abe activities.
In September 1993.
Together with NGOs, related organizations, and individuals, he invited Rigoberta Menchú Tum, winner of the 1992 Nobel Peace Prize and UN Goodwill Ambassador for the 1993 International Year of the World’s Indigenous People, to Japan.
