Takichi Nishiyama, Ex-Reporter Known for Secret Pact Incident, Dies
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Tokyo, Feb. 25 (Jiji Press)--Takichi Nishiyama, a former Japanese newspaper reporter known for being arrested on suspicion of illegally obtaining copies of confidential diplomatic cables on a secret Japan-U.S. agreement, died of heart failure at a nursing care facility in Kitakyushu, Fukuoka Prefecture, southwestern Japan, Friday. He was 91.
While working for the Mainichi Shimbun daily, Nishiyama in 1971 obtained the copies from a Japanese Foreign Ministry official. In April 1972, Nishiyama and the ministry official were arrested on suspicion of violating the national public service law.
Nishiyama was confirmed guilty by the Supreme Court in 1978.
The diplomatic cables suggested that the Japanese government secretly promised to bear 4 million dollars of costs to restore U.S. military sites in Okinawa Prefecture to their original condition, before Tokyo and Washington signed a pact on the return of Okinawa to Japan from U.S. occupation.
After official documents that supported the existence of the secret pact were discovered in the United States, Nishiyama in 2005 filed a lawsuit demanding an apology and compensation from the Japanese government, claiming his indictment was illegal. He lost the suit in 2008.
[Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.]