Japan’s broadcaster NHK slammed after its reporter says Diaoyu Islands belong to China

The reporter had read a report about graffiti on one of the pillars at the entrance to Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine in June. Immediately after the segment, the reporter made unscripted comments that lasted for around 20 seconds stating that the uninhabited islands in the East China Sea are Chinese territory.

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Japan hunts for man seen on Chinese social media spray-painting ‘toilet’ on Yasukuni Shrine

Japan hunts for man seen on Chinese social media spray-painting ‘toilet’ on Yasukuni Shrine

Yasukuni Shrine honours about 2.5 million Japanese war dead, including convicted war criminals.

Victims of Japanese aggression during the first half of the 20th century, especially China and the Koreas, see the shrine as a symbol of Japanese militarism. The countries criticise visits by Japanese lawmakers and offerings to the shrine as signs of their lack of remorse over Japan’s wartime actions.

“It is outrageous that something like this could happen at Japan’s national broadcaster,” said Hiromichi Moteki, the acting secretary general of the Tokyo-based Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact.

“An incident like this weakens Japan’s sovereignty over the Senkakus because China can now say that this belief has been stated on Japan’s national broadcaster,” he told This Week in Asia. “[China] will use this to try to legitimise that claim.”

The government needs to condemn the broadcast and make it clear that it does not reflect the official position of the nation or NHK, while senior executives of the station “need to take responsibility” for the incident, he said.

A Chinese coast guard vessel sails near a Japanese coast guard vessel off Uotsuri Island, one of the group of Diaoyu Islands that Japan calls the Senkaku Islands. Photo: Reuters

The broadcaster issued a statement on Monday evening, apologising for the incident.

“It was inappropriate that remarks unrelated to a news topic were broadcast and we deeply apologise for that,” it said, adding that it is considering measures to stop anything similar happening in the future, such as pre-recording programmes.

It has also filed a formal complaint with the Chinese reporter and the staffing organisation through which he was employed by NHK. That company said on Monday that it will terminate the reporter’s contract.

But NHK’s actions failed to soothe public fury, with viewers and listeners bombarding its social media and news sites with irate comments.

The episode was a “radio hijacking or a terrorist incident using public airwaves”, said a comment of the story in the Chunichi Sports newspaper on Wednesday.

Another comment demanded that the broadcaster issue an unambiguous statement on Japan’s sovereignty over the islands, and threatened to withhold paying his monthly NHK fee unless the statement was released.

A comment on the story in the Sankei newspaper on Wednesday called it “unacceptable for a public broadcaster to act in a treasonous manner”, while another said NHK had “undermined national security” and lost all credibility with the public.

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