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Encyclopedia > Akahata

Akahata (しんぶん赤旗 Shimbun Akahata lit. newspaper red flag) is the daily organ of the Japanese Communist Party in the form of a national newspaper. Started in 1928, Akahata has a 16_page daily edition and a larger 36_page Sunday edition.


Akahata has journalists based in the capitals of ten countries around the globe. They are Beijing, Berlin, Cairo, Hanoi, London, Mexico City Moscow, New Delhi, Paris, and Washington, D.C..


See also: Japanese media


External links

  • Shimbun Akahata (http://www.jcp.or.jp/akahata/index.html) (in Japanese)
  • Japan Press Weekly (http://www.japan-press.co.jp/) (in English)





  Results from FactBites:
 
Re: Akahata editorial on NATO air strikes (fwd) (139 words)
Akahata editorial on NATO air strikes (fwd) Andreas Hippin
Re: Akahata editorial on NATO air strikes (fwd) Jeffrey Sams
RE: Akahata editorial on NATO air strikes (fwd) Joe Wein
akahata (656 words)
Akahata revealed the reality of the war of aggression and called for an end to it.
Akahata of October 5, 1931, reported that the charge was "false" and that the "true cause" of the war was the fact that "Japanese imperialism was preparing the war to pillage (Chinese) territories."
Akahata reports the Iraq War as a "war of aggression" based on facts and exposes how dangerous it is to revise the Constitution and how regressive and unfair the consumption tax is. It seriously pursues the way to inform people of the truth.
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