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Ethics scandal involving communications official linked to Suga widens

Ethics scandal involving communications official linked to Suga widens Mar. 5 06:04 am JST Mar. 13 | 12:24 am JST TOKYO The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below. © KYODO ©2021 GPlusMedia Inc. SOP in Japan. Should not be news to anyone. 9 ( +10 / -1 ) Mar. 5 06:51 am JST I thought it did not violate the ethics code, so I did not report it. So if I think it s ok to be taken to dinner with vested interests then it s ok. The man is either incompetent or brazenly corrupt 16 ( +17 / -1 ) Mar. 5 06:52 am JST Yep. But this is how things roll here. The only surprising thing is the amount of wining and dining and other scandals that are being reported recently.

Japan vows swift probe as NTT caught up in growing dining scandal

Japan vows swift probe as NTT caught up in growing dining scandal
japantimes.co.jp - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from japantimes.co.jp Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Disgraced ministry officials also dined with NTT president

Disgraced ministry officials also dined with NTT president Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. said Wednesday that its president dined with communications ministry officials mired in an ethics scandal involving Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga s eldest son. Japanese weekly magazine Shukan Bunshun reported online earlier in the day that NTT President Jun Sawada had treated Makiko Yamada, Yasuhiko Taniwaki and another official to expensive meals. The ministry said it is looking into the matter. From left: Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. President Jun Sawada, Yasuhiko Taniwaki, vice minister for policy coordination at the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, and former Cabinet Public Relations Secretary Makiko Yamada. (Kyodo)

Japan gov t press official resigns amid scandal involving PM Suga s son

Suga s press official quits over communications ministry scandal Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga s press official resigned Monday, a week after drawing fire for being treated to a lavish dinner while at the communications ministry by a broadcasting firm that employs the premier s eldest son. Makiko Yamada. (Kyodo)   Cabinet Public Relations Secretary Makiko Yamada was hospitalized Sunday afternoon due to ill health requiring about two weeks of treatment and reported later that day she can no longer fulfill her duties, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said at a press conference. Her abrupt departure is yet another blow to Suga, who has been struggling with falling public support after a series of scandals involving government officials and criticism over his response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Japan s Prime Minister Hit With Nepotism Scandal – The Diplomat

Advertisement Prime Minister Suga Yoshihide’s leadership is being tested after senior bureaucrats from the Ministry of Communications were found to have been treated to a series of lavish meals with executives of satellite broadcasting company Tohokushinsha – which employs Suga’s eldest son, Seigo. At least 11 senior ministry officials in Suga’s inner circle have been accused of potentially violating the National Public Service Ethics Law, which prohibits receiving favors from stakeholders. An internal investigation revealed that between July 2016 and December 2020, 11 executives from the ministry wined and dined 39 times with Tohokoshinsha executives, who paid up to $700 per head for meals of Wagyu beef and seafood.

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