A woman in U.N. is once again saying outrageous things about Japan.
In the first place, where are your people qualified to criticize Japan, the best country in the world, after 70 years of postwar Nazism in the name of anti-Japanese education in China and South Korea!
January 10, 2019
We are re-submitting this article because we have heard that people who make their living at the United Nations, arguably the worst organization in history, are once again saying outrageous things about Japan.
Regarding Ghosn's arrest, the New York Times is criticizing the state of the Japanese judicial system, just as they did with their unmitigated disdain for pre-war Japan.
The same goes for the French media. I am annoyed (to borrow a phrase from a professor at the University of Tokyo who is also an NHK cultural expert) because the rest of the Western media is the same way. Still, the Japanese judicial system has no right to be complained about by you.
The Japanese judicial system is so democratic that it takes longer than your country to conduct an investigation.
In the first place, where is your qualification to criticize Japan, the best country in the world, when you have been neglecting Nazism in the name of anti-Japanese education in China and Korea for 70 years since the end of World War II!
To teach you exactly that, I had to ask my bookworm friend to buy me a copy of the Weekly Bunshun.
First, let's start with the article posted online by Fuji TV.
ーーHow often do you make so many arrests?
Hiramatsu Desk:
It is said that there are many other areas where the suspect Ghosn privatized the company Nissan and misappropriated personal funds. If so, he may be re-arrested for this breach of trust and additional charges. Regarding "re-arrest," the possibility of a third "re-arrest" is not zero.
Mr. Ghosn's detention is too prolonged, and people overseas are angry, aren't they?
Hiramatsu Desk:
It is a domestic arrest in Japan.
We are investigating him according to the Japanese system, and if we give him preferential treatment just because he is a foreigner, other Japanese defendants will complain.
Japanese and foreigners should be treated equally.
Even so, people from various embassies visit Ghosn daily to offer food and talk to him.
I think, "Aren't they giving him too much preferential treatment just because he is a foreigner?"
And if they shorten the detention period, that would make the Japanese defendants angry, wouldn't it?
That's why I don't think they will ever allow Ghosn to be given special treatment because he is a foreigner.
On the contrary, they could have been stricter this time.
(Commentary: Hidetoshi Hiramatsu, Fuji Television Network, Social Affairs Desk)
The following is from the weekly Bunshun, which was released yesterday.
Even in the detention center, Mr. Ghosn is treated like a VIP and is moved from a three-tatami-mat cell to a room with a large bed.
Lawyers cannot see him during the year-end and New Year's holidays, but this was also granted as a "particular measure."
2023/3/6, in Kyoto