Issue:
December 2025
Japanese journalists face routine harassment and intimidation. And politicians are among the culprits

Takashi Tachibana personifies the warring line between old and new media. A former program producer with NHK, Tachibana was fired for leaking stories about expense-padding and other accounting scams at his publicly funded employer. He has since morphed into an implacable foe of Japan’s flagship broadcaster, and swapped allegiance from NHK’s careful presentation of pseudo-establishment views for the unfiltered, wild west of social media.
On November 9, Tachibana was arrested after leading what many saw as an online lynch mob against Hyogo politician Hideaki Takeuchi. Tachibana accused Takeuchi of masterminding claims of bullying that forced Hyogo Governor Motohiko Saito out of office last year. Saito was re-elected in November last year, boosted by an online campaign against “fake” legacy media. Relentlessly harassed by internet trolls, Takeuchi committed suicide two months later, aged 50.
At the end of November, Tachibana was charged with defamation over the allegedly false online claims, according to the Kyodo news agency.
MAGA-style trolling, targeting politicians and journalists with false or distorted information and even physical threats, is growing in Japan. In October, Yoshihiro Murai, the incumbent governor of Miyagi Prefecture, accused his election opponent, the Sanseito-backed Masamune Wada (another former NHK employee) of spreading scare stories about the selloff of water rights to “foreign” companies.
Murai insisted that just one of 10 private companies that bought operating rights for the prefecture’s water utility was non-Japanese, but said his message had been drowned out by online disinformation.
Inevitably, media workers have been caught up in the resulting information wars. In August, Sanseito banned a reporter from the Kanagawa Shimbun from attending a regular press conference. The journalist and the newspaper, which have been critical of the rightwing party’s anti-immigration policies, have since been hounded by Sanseito supporters.
Tomomi Akasaka of Kyodo News is among several journalists who have complained about being harassed after covering hate speech against Kurds in Saitama Prefecture. Japan’s small Kurdish community, clustered in the cities of Kawaguchi and Warabi, have been targeted by rightwing groups seeking their expulsion. Reporters who cover the story can often expect a tsunami of abuse.
Some are sounding the alarm. “As journalists, it is only right to accept valid criticism from people who disagree with us,” says Yoichi Tanaka, a journalist with the Kobe Shimbun. “But these sort of concentrated harassment campaigns are entirely new.” Tanaka says some stories about Hyogo governor Saito generate 500 calls a month, with newsroom staff bearing the brunt, and warns that personal attacks on journalists have reached “unprecedented levels”.
“Violence is a possibility if this does not stop,” Tanaka says, noting the increasingly abusive language used online and during campaign trails.
A typical line of attack by Tachibana, for example, was to accuse the mainstream media of hiding behind privacy laws when reporting on Saito's election. “We had to respect these laws, but Tachibana said we were biased in our reporting against Saito,” says Tanaka.
In addition, political attacks on journalists are on the rise. Local assemblies have sent protest letters, denied media access and threatened media organizations with legal action across Japan in the name of “biased coverage”. The Japan Federation of Newspaper Workers’ Unions has expressed concern over violations of press freedoms in Ishikawa, Yamanashi, Tokushima, Okinawa, and other prefectures.
In October, Niigata prefectural councillor Takahiro Omokawa allegedly choked a reporter for the local Niigata Nippo newspaper. The reporter’s injuries took a week to heal. Omokawa claimed that he only pushed the reporter for blocking his way and denied allegations of strangling him, according to the Asahi Shimbun.
Last year in Kashiba City, Nara Prefecture, the speaker of the assembly, Hiroshi Kawata, denied access to a photographer with the Nara Shimbun and threatened to sue the local newspaper if it used photos without his permission. Kawata, who resigned at the end of last year, claimed the paper was biased against him.
Hostility toward the establishment media, which Saito’s supporters blamed for trying to oust him, was particularly virulent. While covering Saito’s campaign, reporters were jostled and verbally abused. Bystanders used umbrellas to hit journalists – easily identifiable thanks to their press armbands - or grabbed them by their collars, accusing them of “biased reporting”.
In another recent case, Fumitake Fujita, leader of Nippon Ishin no Kai, posted the business card of a journalist from Shimbun Akahata on his X account, in what many interpreted as an attempt to intimidate the reporter. Although there is little evidence that harassment is organizationally driven, trolls are sometimes jolted into action by dog-whistling politicians.
Tachibana-led protestors, for example, have gathered in front of the homes of politicians and outside newspapers such as the Kobe Shimbun. “What’s most worrying is that there is no reasoning with such people,” Tanaka says. “That inability to find any middle ground is frightening.”
A survey by Kobe Shimbun’s union taken after Saito’s election found that a fifth of its members had suffered verbal attacks. Many had their names, photos, and requests for interviews posted on social media. Journalists at other newspapers have taken sick leave and voiced fears about going out to report, particularly outside Tokyo. In response, newspapers have removed company names from press armbands, and office addresses and even telephone numbers from business cards.
In October, the Japan Federation of Newspaper Workers’ Unions issued a statement on behalf of its regional members, pledging to “continue to seek out and communicate facts” and “resist attacks on journalists via social media and other channels”. Makoto Nishimura, chairperson of the federation, argued that attacks on reporters were not only a labor issue but about the “public’s right to know”.
Hyogo Prefecture has a particular reason to be concerned about violence against journalists. In May 1987, a masked rightist murdered reporter Tomohiro Kojiri at the Asahi Shimbun Hanshin Bureau in Nishinomiya. His colleague, Hyoe Inukai, was badly hurt. The perpetrator has never been caught. “There’s a real possibility of escalation if we cannot put a break on what’s happening, especially when the line between the online world and the real world is so blurred,” Tanaka says.
Tanaka wants local politicians to do more to dampen campaigns against journalists in the interests of democracy. He says his newspaper has received a threat from a caller using the name, “Sekihotai,” the organization that claimed responsibility for killing Kojiri. “People who view us as enemies online are meeting us in the real world. It’s frightening.”
David McNeill is professor of communications and English at University of the Sacred Heart in Tokyo, and co-chair of the FCCJ’s Freedom of the Press Committee. He was previously a correspondent for the Independent, the Economist and the Chronicle of Higher Education
Chie Matsumoto is a Japan-based journalist and a new member of the FCCJ.