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Yasuhiro Sato, a professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo who was the chair of the Cultural Agency’s Conference of Registered Research and Research Contributors to the Cultural Agency, protested that Prime Minister Yoshii Suga refused to nominate six new candidates for membership recommended by the Academic Conference of Japan. It turned out that he had resigned. (Mochizuki Iko)
◆ “There is no point in protesting unless you get upset”
According to Mr. Sato, he learned of the refusal of appointment in the press on October 1, and on the afternoon of the same day he sent an email to the officials of the Cultural Agency saying: “I have no intention of working for a government that it does not respect experts as experts. ” He rejected all government-related work. “” I’ll bother you just before the meeting, but if you don’t bother me a little, there’s no point in protesting. Thank you for your understanding. “The person in charge was arrested by phone on the 5th, but he was determined and agreed to have another president and resigned on the 7th.
Sato said: “Prime Minister Kan and Undersecretary of State Kazuhiro Sugita regard the academic conference, which has always been cautious of scientific research for war purposes, as an obstacle and they do not agree with the Specified Secret Protection Law and security-related laws. I intentionally excluded the six people who had been singing. ” “The refusal to name was made with the explicit purpose of guiding universities and other research institutes to military research. The official residence will intervene in personnel matters even if it violates the law and makes academic research follow the will of the government . I’m trying. ”
◆ Concerned about the impact on citizens
“I have nothing to do with academic conferences,” he said. “Not protecting the freedom of the six rejected professors will sell so much academic freedom to the administration of the time.” If we allow the prime minister to act illegally, it will surely affect not only researchers but also all artists and citizens, including artists and the media, ”he warns.
The Agency for Cultural Affairs responded: “I will not comment” in an interview with this newspaper.
After completing the master’s program at the University of Tokyo Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences in 1980, Mr. Sato worked as an engineer at the Tokyo National Museum, an engineer in the Arts and Crafts Division of the Department of Protection of Cultural Assets of the Cultural Agency and researcher of cultural assets in the same painting department. Retired as a graduate professor (art history). Since 2008, he has also served as a visiting professor at the University of Broadcasting, but voluntarily retired in 2015.
Since 2009 he has been a member of the Special Research Committee designated as a cultural asset, and since April 2008 he is president of the Meeting of Registered Art Research and Research Collaborators. Published in series “History of Japanese art without guide” in the magazine “UP” (Tokyo University Press). In 20 years, he received the award from the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology for “Wakaokaden”.