That the Two Individuals Were Identified as North Korean Agents and Subsequently Denied Entry Visas by the Japanese Government

An analysis highlighting claims that North Korean agents participated as prosecutors in the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal, and that Japan later halted visa issuance to them.
The essay argues that these facts validate Shinzo Abe’s realism and expose overlooked foreign political interference.

Claims of North Korean agents’ involvement in a symbolic tribunal underscore ignored foreign interference and validate Shinzo Abe’s realist stance.

2017-03-22

What follows is a continuation of the previous chapter.
I believe that this fact, too, proves the correctness of my long-standing argument that Shinzo Abe is a rare realist and one of the most capable politicians in the world today.
This is because it clearly illustrated that Shinzo Abe stood in direct opposition to the many other lamentable politicians who calmly overlooked such an unbelievable event taking place.
Criticism Pointing to Foreign Political Influence
In mid-January 2005, Shinzo Abe pointed out that “two individuals serving as prosecutors in the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal were representatives of North Korea, and that those two had been identified as North Korean agents, leading the Japanese government to stop issuing entry visas to them thereafter.”
He expressed the view that “North Korean covert activities had been carried out in relation to the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal.”
Nobuo Ikeda, an economic commentator and former employee of the Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK), also stated that it was “an extremist, out-of-control leftist propaganda event,” and pointed out that “Hwang Ho-nam, who appeared in the role of prosecutor, was a North Korean agent.”

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