Jun'ya Yano (矢野 絢也, Yano Junya; born 27 April 1932) is a retired Japanese politician and political commentator who served as the fourth leader of Komeito between 1986 and 1989. Over a decade after leaving politics, Yano has become a notable critic of the party and its religious partner Soka Gakkai.

Junya Yano
Chairman of Komeito
In office
5 December 1986 – 21 May 1989
Preceded byYoshikatsu Takeiri
Succeeded byKōshirō Ishida
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
30 January 1967 – 18 June 1993
ConstituencyOsaka 4th district (1947–93)
Personal details
Born (1932-04-27) April 27, 1932 (age 92)
Yao, Osaka, Japan
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Komeito (until 1993)
Alma materKyoto University

Biography edit

Early life edit

Yona was born in Yao, Osaka, Osaka, and graduated from Osaka Prefectural Yamamoto High School. He later attended Kyoto University's economics department for three years, where he graduated in March 1955. In the following month, he began working for Obayashi Corporation.

In 1963, he was elected for the first time as a member of the Osaka Prefectural Assembly from Osaka's Ikuno ward. He stood as a Komeito candidate for the former Osaka 4th district in the 1967 general election and landed in first place with 75,775 votes, or 16.9% of the ballots. He was appointed secretary general of Komeito following a provisional party convention almost immediately after the election.

Career in Komeito edit

In 1970, Yano founded the "Society for the Creation of a New Japan" with Japan Socialist Party secretary general Saburō Eda and Democratic Socialist Party secretary general Ryosaku Sasaki. This was conceived as a plan in which the three parties might come to power through a coalition government. Further talks of cooperation occurred the following year,[1] as well as in 1976, when Japan Socialist Party leader Saburō Eda formed the Society for Thinking of a New Japan organisation with Komeito and the Democratic Socialist Party.[2]

In 1981, when Yano was the party's secretary-general, he echoed Komeito and chairman Yoshikatsu Takeiri's shift away from a stringently dovish foreign policy towards accepting the legitimacy of the Japan Self-Defense Forces by arguing that the Soviet Union's military power had become excessive and was now a genuine threat to world peace.[3]

In December 1986, Yona succeeded Yoshikatsu Takeiri, for whom Yona had worked closely for 20 years. In 1987, when the Diet voted for Prime Minister, Yano recommended voting for Takako Doi as an opposition unity candidate. However, she lost to the LDP's Noboru Takeshita by a healthy margin of 154 votes.

In March 1987, Yano met Chinese premier Deng Xiaoping in China, where the two discussed matters relating to the two country's talks of a possible peace treaty,[4] which would later become the Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Japan and China by the end of the year. However, Deng expressed a number of strong criticisms of the Japanese side during these talks, and Japanese authorities were reportedly upset that Deng was willing to discuss these issues with an opposition politician such as Yano instead of with the Japan Defense Agency director-general, who was in China at the time.[5]

In 1988, Yano denied allegations that his party had kicked out maverick lawmaker Toshio Ohashi, who had accused Soka Gakkai and Daisaku Ikeda of asserting excessive control over Komeito, as a means of crushing dissent, instead arguing alongside other party leaders that he was removed because he had been found accepting bribes as high as $264,000 (in 1988 USD, as reported by AP News), as well as for womanising behaviour.[6]

In January 1987, there was some suspicion that Yano's former secretary was among those implicated in the so-called Meidenko incident, which involved a purchase of 1 billion yen stock being sold by the company.[7] Yano denied any involvement of himself or of his secretary.[8] Later on in May, the Asahi Shimbun pursued suspicions that 200 million yen had been exchanged at Yano's home in connection with the stock trading of a company affiliated with Meidenko. Yano denied the allegations.[9] On 10 December 1988, Yano filed a complaint against the Asahi Shinbun for libel, but withdrew it on 23 March 1989.

Meidenkō scandal edit

Yano admitted at a press conference that he exchanged 200 million yen in cash with Atsushi Ishida, the former managing director of Meidenko, at Yano's home, but insisted that Yano was only a mediator in the transaction. In May 1989, the Asahi published a statement by Kogo Nakase, a former Meidenko advisor, in which he claimed that the transaction was direct and not a mediation. Yano steadfastly denied this, calling it an "unfounded and trumped-up remark founded upon malice."[10] The Asahi Shinbun became to publish writings in which they asked whether Yano should resign.[11]

In 1989, shortly after the first allegations against Yano, the notorious Recruit scandal struck. Although it mainly concerned the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, members of other parties were implicated, and Yano announced his intensions to resign after a Komeito lawmaker named Katsuya Ikeda was accused of being involved in the scandal.[12] Yano finally resigned on 17 May from his position and became a chief advisor to the party instead.

After a few more years, without even attempting to run for the 1993 general election, Yano retired from the world of politics in June of that year. In October of the same year, he announced the publication of a report entitled the "Secret Memo for All to See" to Bungei Shunjū magazine, for which he obtained the Bungeishunju Reader Award. With this, he switched over to becoming a political commentator.

After leaving Komeito, Yano has been in several legal troubles. A litigation battle was fought with his former Soka Gakkai and Komeito colleagues, but in February 2012, both sides accepted a court settlement, and Soka Gakkai withdrew three cases and Yano withdrew one.[13]

In 2005, three former Komeito parliamentarians found out that they were accused of stealing Yano's notebooks. They sued Yano and others involved in the magazine publication of the claims. In December 2007, the Tokyo District Court ruled in the parliamentarians' favour by awarding them with 6.6 million yen in damages, and also required the publisher (Kodansha) and Yano to place an apology advertisement.

Later life edit

As a result of his legal accusations against Soka Gakkai, Yano left the group on 1 May 2008, saying that the religious organisation "has strong political influence" and that he "cannot overlook its antisocial behavior anymore."[14]

On 3 November 2010, he received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.

On 11 March 2015, he helped to co-found Satoyama / Sōmō no Kai, a political organisation that focused on issues such as regional revitalisation and solving income inequality. Some of its other co-founders were former prime ministers Tomiichi Murayama and Yukio Hatoyama, as well as prominent politicians Hirohisa Fujii, Masakuni Murakami, and Taku Yamasaki.[15]

Controversies edit

After leaving Komeito, Yano became embroiled in multiple legal proceedings. A litigation battle was fought with former Soka Gakkai and Komeito executives, but in February 2012, both sides accepted a court recommendation that resulted in Soka Gakkai withdrawing three of its cases and Yano withdrawing one of his.[13]

The "black notebook" case edit

In an article published in the Shūkan Gendai magazine on 6 August 2005, three Sokkai Gakkai members and former Komeito politicians were accused by Yano of having threatened him and forcibly searched Yano's entire home without his permission in order to steal some 100 "black notebooks" from his house, all of which contained private "observations and behind-the-scenes details" over his 30 years in the House of Representatives.[14] The three defendants argued that there was no coercion and that the notebooks were obtained with permission from Yano. In December 2007, the Tokyo District Court found Yano's claims to be unfounded,[16] and as a result it ordered Shūkan Gendai, its publisher Kodansha, and Yano to pay ¥6,600,000 in damages and to publish an apology.[17][18][19]

This was appealed, and, in 2009, the Tokyo High Court accepted the appeal and did not recognise Yano's actions as defamation. The Supreme Court's Third Petty Bench further confirmed the appeal and recognised Yano's claim of invasion of privacy and order the notebooks to be returned.[20]

Critic activities edit

In 2008, Yano filed a ¥55,000,000 suit against Soka Gakkai after the former claimed to have been threatened to cease publishing his critiques in a private meeting with Soka Gakkai executives back in May 2005.[21] He also claimed that Soka Gakkai had been monitoring his activities and tried forcing Yano to sell his home in order to make a donation of 200-300 million yen for the group.[14]

On 20 May 2008, the then-Vice Chairman of Soka Gakkai, Yoshiki Tanigawa, filed a lawsuit against Yano after an article was published by Shinchosha in the weekly Shukan Shincho which accused Tanigawa of threatening Yano. Tanigawa claimed that the charge was completely false, and his lawsuit against Yano requested ¥11,000,000 in damages and a published apology advertisement in the magazine and national newspapers.[22] On 20 January 2011, the Tokyo District Court ordered Yano, Shukan Shincho, and the editor-in-chief Hayase to pay ¥330,000 in damages.

On 13 June 2008, the Democratic Party and People's New Party invited Yano as a witness to discuss the relationship between Soka Gakkai and Komeito, as well as to describe the harassment he has claimed to experience from Soka Gakkai ever since he began to criticise the organisation. This move was criticised by Komeito, and LDP lawmaker Isao Iijima also criticised the move.[23][24]

Alma mater fraud edit

In an article by the monthly magazine Business World Nippon (Zaikai Nippon), Yano was accused of fraud. The article introduces suspicions that Yano had "stolen" ¥2,000,000 which was supposed to go towards repairing the tennis courts of his alma mater, Yamamoto High School, all the way back in 1977, when he was a member of the high school's alumni association.[25] Yano sued the publisher of this magazine in December 2006 for damages. A court investigation found that the core element of the Business World Nippon article, disregarding peripheral details, was true, and that Yano's counter-claims lacked evidence, and dismissed all of them on 26 August 2009.[26][27]

Works edit

  • 二重権力・闇の流れ. 文藝春秋. 1994. ISBN 978-4163492100.
  • 黒い手帖―創価学会「日本占領計画」の全記録. 講談社. 2009. ISBN 978-4062152723.
  • 「黒い手帖」裁判全記録. 講談社. 2009. ISBN 978-4062156370.
  • 乱脈経理―創価学会VS.国税庁の暗闘ドキュメント. 講談社. 2011. ISBN 978-4062172318.

References edit

  1. ^ Times, Richard Halloran Special to The New York (1971-09-24). "Komeito Will Join Other Parties In Japan in Efforts to Oust Sato". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  2. ^ Dixon, Karl (1977). "The 1976 General Election in Japan". Pacific Affairs. 50 (2): 208–230. doi:10.2307/2756299. JSTOR 2756299.
  3. ^ Farnsworth, Lee W. (1982). "Japan in 1981: Meeting the Challenges". Asian Survey. 22 (1): 56–68. doi:10.2307/2643710. ISSN 0004-4687. JSTOR 2643710.
  4. ^ Kim, Hong N. (1980). "Sino-Japanese Relations in the Post-Mao Era". Asian Affairs. 7 (3): 161–181. doi:10.1080/00927678.1980.10553876. ISSN 0092-7678. JSTOR 30171737.
  5. ^ Rosen, Stanley (1988-01-01). "China in 1987: The Year of the Thirteenth Party Congress". Asian Survey. 28 (1): 35–51. doi:10.2307/2644871. ISSN 0004-4687. JSTOR 2644871.
  6. ^ Talmadge, Eric (1988). "Scandal Rocks No. 2 Opposition Party, Raises Issue of Religious Influence". Associated Press.
  7. ^ 『朝日新聞』朝日新聞社1988年12月9日
  8. ^ 『読売新聞』読売新聞社1988年12月10日
  9. ^ 『朝日新聞』朝日新聞社1988年12月13日
  10. ^ 『朝日新聞』朝日新聞社1989年5月9日
  11. ^ 『毎日新聞』毎日新聞社1989年5月10日
  12. ^ Schoenberger, Karl (1989-05-18). "Recruit Scandal Jolts Japan Opposition". The Los Angeles Times.
  13. ^ a b 創価学会側と矢野元公明委員長が「手打ち」 双方が提訴4件すべて取り下げ J-CASTニュース 2012年2月20日
  14. ^ a b c Ito, Masami (2008-06-26). "Ex-New Komeito chief lashes out at Soka Gakkai". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  15. ^ 星野典久 (2015-03-11). "村山元首相「日本が孤立しないか」 安倍首相の談話懸念:朝日新聞デジタル". 村山元首相「日本が孤立しないか」――安倍首相の談話懸念. 朝日新聞社. Archived from the original on 2015-03-12. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
  16. ^ "Perspective on ex-Komeito chief". The Japan Times. 2008-07-10. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  17. ^ 公明新聞 (2007-12-22). "週刊現代、矢野氏に賠償命令". Archived from the original on 2008-09-26. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  18. ^ 「記事で名誉棄損、公明元幹部ら勝訴 東京地裁」 - 朝日新聞 2007年12月22日
  19. ^ 「講談社などに660万円賠償命令 週刊現代の記事巡り/東京地裁」 - 読売新聞 2007年12月22日
  20. ^ 『毎日新聞』2009年9月2日付。
  21. ^ 元公明党委員長、創価学会を提訴=「言論活動を妨害」 − 東京地裁」 - 時事通信社2008年5月12日配信記事
  22. ^ 元公明党委員長と新潮社を提訴=「脅迫」記事で創価学会幹部 − 東京地裁」- 時事通信社2008年5月20日配信記事
  23. ^ 民主などが矢野元公明党委員長から聴取 公明党・創価学会の関係 創価学会提訴の矢野元公明党委員長「国会招致応じる」 Archived 2008-09-21 at the Wayback Machine - 産経新聞 2008年6月13日
  24. ^ 飯島勲 裏を読む先を視る「矢野公明元委員長の国会招致に反対」 - スポーツニッポン 2008年7月19日
  25. ^ 同誌2006年10月号
  26. ^ 矢野氏の現金受領『記事は真実』 雑誌の名誉棄損認めず」 - 共同通信社2009年8月26日配信記事
  27. ^ 矢野氏の現金受領『真実』 雑誌記事で名誉棄損認めず Archived 2009-09-14 at the Wayback Machine」 - MSN産経ニュース2009年8月26日配信記事