- Domei Tsushin
nihongo|Dōmei News Agency|同盟通信社| Dōmei Tsūshinsha| extra=literal translation Federated News Agency was the official
news agency of theEmpire of Japan History and Development
Dōmei was the end result of years of efforts by Japanese journalists and business leaders to create a national
news agency in Japan that could compete with (and if necessary counter)Reuters and other internationally-recognized news agencies on a global basis.After the
Manchurian Incident of 1931, presidentYukichi Iwanaga (岩永 裕吉 "Iwanaga Yūkichi") of theNihon Shimbun Rengosha (日本新聞聯合社 Associated Press, or “Rengo”) proposed the merger of his news agency with the Nihon Dempo Tsushinsha (日本電報通信社 Japan Telegraphic News Agency, or “Dentsu”). Despite government backing for the move, the merger was resisted by Dentsu presidentHoshio Mitsunaga (光永 星郎 "Mitsunaga Hoshio"), who was reluctant to give up control of his company’s lucrativeadvertising business, and by concerns that a merger would threaten his advertising customer base – the provincial newspapers who competed against Rengo. As a compromise, Mitsunaga agreed to split Dentsu, and separate the news agency from the advertising agency. The news agency was reorganized in a merger with Rengo on28 December 1935 to form the Dōmei Tsūshinsha.During
World War II , Dōmei News Agency came under the control of theMinistry of Communications (Japan) , a pre-warcabinet level ministry in the Japanese government. Domei maintained a network of offices outside Japan, dispatching reporters to all Allied and neutral countries, and was also involved in film and radio work. It also collected news and information from various sources to pass on to the government and military, and produced various works ofpropaganda aimed at foreign countries.Dōmei issued news to the public that was censored along government-approved lines, and broadcast news in Japanese and in major European languages through an extensive network of
radio station s in east Asia,Manchukuo and in Japanese-occupiedChina . It was later authorized by the Japanese military to develop a news network and radio stations in Japanese-occupiedSingapore and Malaya.A number of documented incidents from the period around the outbreak of the
Pacific War show that on a personal level Dōmei's staff had good relationships with foreign journalists.Under the
Allied occupation of Japan Dōmei was disbanded, and its functions divided split betweenKyodo News (共同通信社) andJiji Press (時事通信社).References
*cite book
last = Huffman
first = James
year = 2006
title = Modern Japan, An Encyclopedia of History, Culture and Nationalism
publisher = Routledge
id = ISBN 0815325258
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