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Japanese reporter Tatsuya Kato faces criminal libel charge in South Korea

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Japanese reporter Tatsuya Kato faces criminal libel charge in South Korea

S Korean authorities question bureau chief over column about president

PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 09 September, 2014, 10:00pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 10 September, 2014, 2:58am

Agence France-Presse in Tokyo

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Tatsuya Kato faces a possible criminal libel charge. Photo: Kyodo

A Japanese newspaper said yesterday it was encouraged by calls from a press freedom group for South Korea not to prosecute its Seoul bureau chief over an alleged libel of President Park Geun-hye.

Tatsuya Kato, 48, who heads the Seoul operation of the conservative Sankei Shimbun, was questioned by authorities in South Korea after complaints over an online column about Park.

He was banned from leaving South Korea late last month and faces a possible seven-year jail term if convicted of criminal libel.

The column, which was posted online on August 3 and has not been removed, is about "rumours" concerning Park's whereabouts at the time of the sinking of a passenger ferry with the loss of 300 lives.

Media freedom group Reporters Without Borders defended the newspaper, arguing the subject of the paper's column was "clearly" in the public interest.

South Korean prosecutors had begun questioning Kato on August 18 as a result of complaints filed by an association of South Korean citizens, the group noted, adding he remained under surveillance and his freedom of movement had been curtailed.

"It is completely normal for news media to ask questions about the actions of politicians, including the president," said Benjamin Ismaol, the head of the Reporters Without Borders Asia desk.

"Vagueness about the president's agenda during a national tragedy is clearly a subject of public interest," he said in a statement.

"Furthermore, Kato's story was based on information which was already online and which has not been the subject of any complaint. We call on the authorities to drop the charges against Kato and to lift the restrictions on his movements."

The Sankei Shimbun was known for being critical of South Korea and was not popular with the South Korean public, the group added.

The newspaper said it welcomed the intervention by Reporters Without Borders.

"We take it as very encouraging support," a statement issued by the paper's public relations department said.

The daily published a full Japanese translation of the global press group's statement in its edition.

Takeshi Kobayashi, chief editor at the Sankei's Tokyo head office, said in a statement last month that "the column had no intent whatsoever to defame or denigrate the South Korean president".

He said it was "hard to understand why the column was called into question" as it was based on exchanges in South Korea's parliament and on a column in South Korea's major daily Chosun Ilbo.

Other Japanese media have also voiced concern over the South Korean action.

 
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