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Shingo Nishimura (西村眞悟, Nishimura Shingo); born 7 July 1948) is a Japanese politician who was a member of House of Representatives from 1993 to 2014. Nishimura is known for his negationism of Japanese war crimes committed during World War II.

Shingo Nishimura
西村眞悟
Member of the House of Representatives for Kinki PR block
In office
18 July 1993 – 14 December 2014
Personal details
Born (1948-07-07) 7 July 1948 (age 76)
Sakai, Japan
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Alma materKyoto University

Background and career

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A native of Sakai and graduate of Kyoto University Faculty of Law, Nishimura was elected to the Diet for the first time in 1993 after an unsuccessful run the year prior.

On 2005, because of violations of the Lawyer Act, Nishimura is divested his lawyer license.

Three other members of his family have also been members of the House of Representatives:

  • his father Eiichi Nishimura (1904-1971) was a former chairman of the Democratic Socialist Party - Shingo is his fourth son
  • his father-in-law Okazawa Kanji
  • his cousin Shozo Nishimura

Right-wing positions

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Affiliated to the openly revisionist lobby Nippon Kaigi,[1] Nishimura was a supporter of right-wing filmmaker Satoru Mizushima's 2007 revisionist film The Truth about Nanjing, which denied that the Nanjing Massacre ever occurred.[2]

Nishimura was among the members of the Nippon Kaigi council at the Diet who signed a full-page advertisement in The Washington Post following the US House Resolution on comfort women. The ad denied Imperial Japan's sexual slavery system: "We must note that it is a gross and deliberate distortion of reality to contend that the Japanese army was guilty of 'coercing young women intro sexual slavery' in 'one of the largest cases of human trafficking in the 20th century'".[3]

In a statement defending mayor of Osaka Tōru Hashimoto in May 2013, Shingo Nishimura made the controversial claim that Japan is full of Korean prostitutes, a comment that led to his expulsion from the Japan Restoration Party.[4][5]

In the 2014 Japanese general election, Nishimura was defeated.

References

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  • 政治家情報 〜西村 真悟〜. ザ・選挙 (in Japanese). JANJAN. Archived from the original on 2007-12-03. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  • 日의원 "일본에 한국인 매춘부 득실득실" 망언. Chosun Ilbo (in Korean). Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  • "Japanese Restoration Party Leader Shingo Nishimura Gets the Boot After More Controversial Comments". HNGN. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
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