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“Japanese Paper Apologizes for Anti - Semitic Ad”
by Arutz Sheva   
December 6th, 2014

A conservative Japanese daily on Saturday apologized for carrying an advertisement for books by an anti-Semitic author who claims Jewish people were behind the country's 2011 earthquake-tsunami disaster.

The advert ran in a regional edition of the Sankei Shimbun national newspaper on November 26, and promoted the works of Richard Koshimizu, a self-styled journalist and activist who also blames Jews for the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in the United States.

A little-known figure in Japan, Koshimizu used the promotional space to market a book claiming the United States is a "Jewish dictatorship state" that detonated an atomic bomb deep underwater to deliberately trigger the earthquake and subsequent tsunami.

It was intended to destroy the Japanese economy and defend the dollar, he outrageously claimed.

"It is extremely regrettable that an advertisement of this content was carried and delivered to our readers, and we deeply apologize to readers and the people of the Jewish community," Sankei president Takamitsu Kumasaka said in a statement published in the paper.

"It was obvious there was a fault in our screening of advertisements," he said. The Sankei said the ad was in the Tokai/Hokuriku edition covering central Japan, which has a circulation of just 5,000 copies.

The March 2011 natural disaster sparked the Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown and left 18,000 people dead or missing.

In another book featured in the same advertisement, Koshimizu claims the Holocaust was a "fabrication" designed to establish the state of Israel.

Kumasaka added he had received a letter of protest from Abraham Cooper, associate dean of Jewish rights group the Simon Wiesenthal Center, over the advert.

"The Sankei considers the Holocaust by the Nazis as an unforgivable, heinous crime," the president said.

Japan has a very small Jewish community, which mostly consists of visiting Israeli businessmen and those remaining from the Jewish communities that fled Europe into the country from the Holocaust. There was a large community established in the port city of Kobe, with many reaching Japan via Shanghai.

Japan and Israel are currently rapidly strengthening their relations, with a large Israeli delegation leaving for Japan last month after a visit by Japan's Deputy Foreign Minister the month before, and after the signing of an Industrial R&D Agreement in July which is the first such agreement Japan has signed.

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