The Reality of the United Nations University and the UNITAR Hiroshima Office: A Structure in Which Anti-Japanese Discourse Grows on Japan’s Contributions

Published on July 15, 2019.
Based on an essay by Masayuki Takayama, this article addresses issues surrounding the United Nations University, the UNITAR Hiroshima Office, Japan’s UN contributions, and anti-Japanese discourse directed at Japan.
Referring to the Netherlands, UN human-rights bodies, the United Nations University, Mushakoji Kinhide, Owada Hisashi, Ramesh Thakur, and Nassrine Azimi, it criticizes the structure in which Japan bears large financial burdens while allowing rhetoric that denigrates Japan.

July 15, 2019.
The person who served as the head of this office, and who even now leeches off it under the title of senior adviser, is the Iranian woman Nassrine Azimi.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
The university that Masako-sama also attended.
This is deeply connected with the national character of her homeland, the Netherlands.
In the last war, it lost its treasured Dutch East Indies and became poor.
Its resentment runs deep.
It is a lying nation that executed more than 200 Class B and C war criminals on the basis of absurd accusations, and while outwardly saying it would not take war reparations, extorted reparations twice behind the scenes.
The second time, Queen Beatrix made the request two years after the great funeral of Emperor Showa.
Incidentally, royal families from all over the world attended that great funeral, but only the Dutch royal family was absent.
Because it is a royal family known for its close friendship with Her Imperial Highness Princess Masako, I do not want to say anything too harsh, but there is no doubt that Maud was dyed by an anti-Japanese attitude extending from the royal family downward.
Incidentally, both her daimyo-style travel expenses to Japan to create this false report and her high salary are all paid out of UN contributions.
In the past, Japan paid 20 percent of those contributions, 60 billion yen(now 30 billion yen).
As with UNESCO, Japan should probably stop paying those contributions as well.
Since the subject of Masako-sama has come up, one of the places that Her Imperial Highness frequently visited while taking time off from official duties was the United Nations University on Aoyama-dori.
I hear that the building, made entirely of granite, even has a room for Masako-sama, but Japan invited this institution, and Japan bears almost all of its 70 million dollars in maintenance costs.
However, what is held there are said to be many anti-Japanese seminars by sympathizers of former vice-rector Mushakoji Kinhide, who is close to North Korea, and occasionally lectures by Owada Hisashi, who is close to Soka Gakkai.
Among those who earned their living there was the Indian Ramesh Thakur, who has written nothing but abuse of Japan in The Japan Times.
An Iranian woman who loves Naoto Kan.
There is also the Hiroshima Office of the United Nations Institute for Training and Research(UNITAR).
Japan bears most of the maintenance costs here as well, and matters that should be handled by the countries concerned are dealt with here, such as what to do about Sudan, once the inner chamber of Arab oil-producing countries and now in a state of division.
The person who served as the head of this office, and who even now leeches off it under the title of senior adviser, is the Iranian woman Nassrine Azimi.
She has the abnormal character of loving Naoto Kan of the Democratic Party, and after the Great East Japan Earthquake, she continued lecturing Japan, in spite of being merely a UN staff member, saying, “Why does Japan, the atomic-bombed country, cling to nuclear power generation?” and “Why does it not stop nuclear power?”
The Netherlands, Iran, and Bulgaria are all half-bankrupt states.
Unable to put their own countries in order, they leech off Japan and try to degrade Japan with groundless lies and slanders.
The United Nations is a place where only such people run rampant, and where the even more harmful Chinese Communist regime holds a veto.
Japan should seriously consider getting out.
(December 2015 issue)

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