http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2012/06/what-kind-of-joke-is-this-japanese-msms.html
They must be feeling safe to report, because the scale of the protest was much smaller in the morning of June 16. 300 to 400 people showed up in the rain to protest the ministerial meeting that PM Noda was having at that time.
The Japanese mainstream media show no embarrassment for not having reported anything at all on the June 15 protest of 11,000 people. None of them even say there was a protest on June 15.
Who are they kidding? Majority of Japanese people whose sources of news are still traditional newspapers and TV, and/or who would rather not hear anything combative like a protest against a government policy.
TBS Television: http://news.tbs.co.jp/newseye/tbs_newseye5056988.html
Nikkei Shinbun:http://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXNASDG1600Q_W2A610C1CC0000/
Jiji Tsushin: http://jiji.com/jc/p?id=20120616122848-0012777847
NHK News: http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20120616/k10015874021000.html
Mainichi Shinbun:http://mainichi.jp/select/news/20120616k0000e040159000c.html
Reuters is one of the very few news outlets worldwide who reported on the June 15 protest that drew 11,000 people:
(What Kind of Joke Is This?) Japanese Mainstream Media Report on June 16 Protest Against Ooi Restart, Pretend As If 11,000-Strong Protest on June 15 Never Happened
They must be feeling safe to report, because the scale of the protest was much smaller in the morning of June 16. 300 to 400 people showed up in the rain to protest the ministerial meeting that PM Noda was having at that time.
The Japanese mainstream media show no embarrassment for not having reported anything at all on the June 15 protest of 11,000 people. None of them even say there was a protest on June 15.
Who are they kidding? Majority of Japanese people whose sources of news are still traditional newspapers and TV, and/or who would rather not hear anything combative like a protest against a government policy.
TBS Television: http://news.tbs.co.jp/newseye/tbs_newseye5056988.html
Nikkei Shinbun:http://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXNASDG1600Q_W2A610C1CC0000/
Jiji Tsushin: http://jiji.com/jc/p?id=20120616122848-0012777847
NHK News: http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20120616/k10015874021000.html
Mainichi Shinbun:http://mainichi.jp/select/news/20120616k0000e040159000c.html
Reuters is one of the very few news outlets worldwide who reported on the June 15 protest that drew 11,000 people:
...But the decision risks a backlash from a public deeply concerned about nuclear safety. As many as 10,000 demonstrators gathered outside Noda's office on Friday night amid a heavy police presence to denounce the restarts, urging the premier to step down and shouting "Lives matter more than the economy."
I heard that BBC also reported in the news program, but I haven't found it myself.
and.....
http://enenews.com/japan-prime-minister-orders-restart-of-nuclear-reactors-under-intense-pressure-from-banks-the-dustbin-of-history-is-waiting-for-him-says-expert-massive-protests-as-70-of-public-opposed
Japan Nuclear Freeze Ends as Voter Backlash Begins for Noda
Bloomberg
By Jacob Adelman and Yuji Okada
Jun 15, 2012 10:49 PM ET
Bloomberg
By Jacob Adelman and Yuji Okada
Jun 15, 2012 10:49 PM ET
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda approved the first restart of Japan’s power reactors since last year’s Fukushima nuclear disaster, a decision that could undermine his political support and force early elections.[...]A Mainichi News poll shows more than 70 percent of the population opposes restarting the Ohi reactors[...]Noda “could end up like all his predecessors in the dustbin of history very quickly,” said Robert Dujarric, director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University’s Tokyo campus. “The dustbin is waiting for him.”[...]Noda’s “under intense political pressure from the banks and the utilities who want those restarted,” Andrew DeWit, a professor at Tokyo’s Rikkyo University who focuses on energy policy. “They want to get those income streams back in operation.”[...]
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