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・ Katsuya Miyahira
・ Katsuya Nomura
・ Katsuya Ogawa
・ Katsuya Okada
・ Katsuya Onizuka
・ Katsuya Saito
・ Katsuya Senzaki
・ Katsumi Furitsu
・ Katsumi Hirosawa
・ Katsumi Kawano
・ Katsumi Matsumura
・ Katsumi Michihara
・ Katsumi Nishikawa
・ Katsumi Nomizu
・ Katsumi Oenoki
Katsumi Satō (human rights activist)
・ Katsumi Shibata
・ Katsumi Suzuki
・ Katsumi Suzuki (footballer)
・ Katsumi Tezuka
・ Katsumi Toriumi
・ Katsumi Watanabe
・ Katsumi Yamauchi
・ Katsumi Yanagishima
・ Katsumi Yokota
・ Katsumi Yusa
・ Katsumi Ōno
・ Katsumoto
・ Katsumune Imai
・ Katsunaga


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Katsumi Satō (human rights activist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Katsumi Satō (human rights activist)

(March 5, 1929 - December 2, 2013) was a Japanese human rights activist, editor, and critic.
He was the chairperson of the ''Association of Families of Victims Kidnapped by North Korea'', and head of the so-called ''Contemporary Korea Research Institute'' ("現代コリア研究所").
== Life ==
Born in Niigata Prefecture, he left Maki High School and began working for K Line, where he got involved in union activities, and was fired in 1950, during the red scare. He became involved with the repatriation of Koreans from Japan to North Korea, and received 2 medals for this from North Korea (1962, 1964). At the same time he was active in the movement that campaigned against the discrimination of Koreans in Japan. Disappointed with the human rights situation in North Korea, he quit the Japanese Communist Party, of which he had been a member, did so-called tenkō, and became an anti-communist.
He was chairperson of the "Association of Families of Victims Kidnapped by North Korea" (AFVKN) between 1998 and 2008.
He died on December 2, 2013 from pneumonia.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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