Friday, 29 November 2013

NHK ordered to compensate Aborigine

A Japanese court has ordered public broadcaster NHK to pay almost US$10,000 in damages to a female Taiwanese Aborigine for defaming her by using the term "human zoo" in a program, officials said Friday.
Overturning a lower court ruling, the Tokyo High Court on Thursday ordered NHK to pay ¥1 million (US$9,774) to the woman, with Presiding Judge Noriaki Sudo reportedly saying the broadcaster used a term that had a "serious discriminatory meaning."The program looked at the "Japan-Britain Exhibition" held in London in 1910, to which Japan took several members of Taiwan's Aboriginal population, including the father of the woman, as exotic exhibits, Jiji Press and Kyodo News reported.
Taiwan was a Japanese colony at the time and the practice of exhibiting the little-known peoples of far-flung territories was a common one among imperial powers. Historians say Japan, which had emerged from self-imposed isolation just half a century earlier, joined in partly as an attempt to establish itself as an imperial power and mitigate the perceived risk of it being colonized itself.
In the ruling, Sudo said NHK "repeatedly used the term without giving consideration to its discriminatory meaning," which implied the Paiwan Aborigines were uncivilized, the Tokyo Shimbun reported.

Source: Taipeitimes

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