The Telegram (St. John's)

Japan’s NHK removes video about U.S. protests after online outrage

- CHRIS GALLAGHER CHANG-RAN KIM

TOKYO - Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK apologized on Tuesday and deleted from its Twitter account an animated video aimed at explaining the background behind U.S. protests for police reform, but which instead sparked online outrage for its depiction of African Americans.

The 1:21-minute clip, which NHK had also broadcast on its Sunday evening programme “Sekai no Ima” (“The World Now”), featured a tough-talking black narrator citing the wealth disparity between black and white Americans and the economic impact from the coronaviru­s.

But it made no mention of police brutality or the death of George Floyd, a black man who died on May 25 after being pinned by the neck for close to nine minutes by a white officer’s knee, which sparked the latest protests.

In the clip, the narrator’s bodybuilde­r-like muscles were bursting out of a white tank top, while other Africaname­rican characters included a man with an afro and mutton chop sideburns, and a muscular man in a sleeveless purple suit, fedora-style hat and sandals strumming a guitar.

“While we understand @ NHK’S intent to address complex racial issues in the United States, it’s unfortunat­e that more thought and care didn’t go into this video,” the interim head of the U.S. embassy in Tokyo, Joseph M. Young, said on Twitter. “The caricature­s used are offensive and insensitiv­e.”

NHK said it had decided to take down the tweet after receiving a lot of criticism and that it had posted the video with a “lack of considerat­ion”.

“We apologize to those who were made to feel uncomforta­ble,” the broadcaste­r said on Twitter.

The video had been viewed more than one million times as of midday Tuesday on the programme’s @nhk_sekaima

Twitter account.

Tennis star Naomi Osaka retweeted the video with a GIF expressing bewilderme­nt.

“This is awful. I’m embarrasse­d to say I’m Japanese when I see this,” tweeted another user, @emiliharat­atani. “Do you know what is happening in America now?!”

@Cheetosont­oast called it “racist” and “discrimina­tory”.

Baye Mcneil, a Japan-based African-american author and activist, said the clip showed the need for local broadcaste­rs to educate themselves.

“Any child who looks at that video will walk away from it feeling, ‘Yeah, maybe these people have been treated unfairly … but they’re big and awful and scary!’” he told Reuters before the video was removed. “How can they (NHK) think people are going to be sympatheti­c to the people being oppressed after watching that video?”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Women gesture during a protest outside of City Hall against racial inequality in the aftermath of the death in Minneapoli­s police custody of George Floyd in Los Angeles, June 6.
REUTERS Women gesture during a protest outside of City Hall against racial inequality in the aftermath of the death in Minneapoli­s police custody of George Floyd in Los Angeles, June 6.

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