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Women account for record 37% of Japanese government s new recruits

Women account for record 37% of Japanese government s new recruits Sorry, but your browser needs Javascript to use this site. If you re not sure how to activate it, please refer to this site: https://www.enable-javascript.com/ Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga addresses people newly hired at central government agencies in a video message on April 7. | POOL / VIA KYODO Jiji May 28, 2021 The government said Friday that women accounted for a record 37% of its new recruits who joined on April 1, exceeding the target of 35%. The share increased 0.2 percentage point from the previous year. The rise reflects an improvement in work environments at central government agencies, which has made it easier for employees to balance work and life, according to the Cabinet Bureau of Personnel Affairs.

Japan opposition parties slam gov t over press official s resignation, call her victim

Japan opposition parties slam gov t over press official s resignation, call her victim March 2, 2021 (Mainichi Japan) Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato speaks about the resignation of Cabinet Public Relations Secretary Makiko Yamada during the House of Representatives Budget Committee meeting on March 1, 2021. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is seen to the right. (Mainichi/Kan Takeuchi) TOKYO Japan s opposition camp is slamming Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga s government following the resignation of a Cabinet press official over lavish dinners she was treated to by a broadcasting company Suga s son works for. Critics referred to her as a victim of what they say is an iron-fisted approach within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) that has persisted since the previous administration of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and that this culture forced the senior bureaucrat to attend dinner functions.

Editorial: Wining and dining scandals reveal Japan s distorted politician-bureaucrat ties

news Editorial: Wining and dining scandals reveal Japan s distorted politician-bureaucrat ties The Mainichi © The Mainichi There has been a spate of revelations of Japanese bureaucrats having been wined and dined by private stakeholders, resulting in senior officials from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications and the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries being punished for violating the National Public Service Ethics Code. The scandals have left us appalled at the cozy ties forged between top bureaucrats at ministries and agencies and the very businesses they are meant to oversee and regulate. The communications ministry meted out punishments to 11 senior officials lavishly entertained by the eldest son of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and other figures from broadcasting firm Tohokushinsha Film Corp. It has also emerged that Cabinet Public Relations Secretary Makiko Yamada was dined by Suga s son and others during her days as a vice-mi

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