Jiji Press Ltd. (株式会社時事通信社, Kabushiki gaisha Jiji Tsūshinsha) is a news agency in Japan.
Native name | 株式会社 時事通信社 |
---|---|
Romanized name | Kabushiki gaisha Jiji Tsūshin-sha |
Company type | Private employee-owned KK |
Predecessor | Domei Tsushin |
Founded | November 1, 1945 |
Headquarters | Ginza 5-15-8, , Japan |
Number of locations | 78 offices in Japan, 28 offices overseas |
Key people | Masao Omuro (President) |
262 million yen (2016) | |
Total assets | 38 billion yen (2016) |
Total equity | 21 billion yen (2016) |
Number of employees | 862 |
Website | jiji |
Footnotes / references 2016 financials: [1] |
History
editJiji was formed in November 1945 following the breakup of Domei Tsushin, the government-controlled news service responsible for disseminating information prior to and during World War II. Jiji inherited Domei's business-oriented news operations, while Kyodo News inherited its general public-oriented news operations. In later years Jiji developed ties with UPI, the Associated Press, AFP, Reuters and other international news organizations.[1]
In 2011, Jiji reported that Olympus CEO Michael Woodford blackmailed company management into appointing him CEO in exchange for promises to cover up an accounting fraud scandal. Woodford argued that "the so-called unnamed sources at Olympus had clearly lied, [and] Jiji had without proper scrutiny and challenge simply reported those lies." Jiji later withdrew the report and apologized.[2]
In 2012, Jiji president Masahiro Nakata resigned after it was found that a Jiji writer in Washington, D.C. copied an article wired by Kyodo News.[3]
Corporate structure
editJiji is run as an employee-owned corporation and is not publicly traded, nor does it have non-employee shareholders. Jiji has news bureaus throughout Japan and in many major cities worldwide.
Jiji is the third-largest shareholder in Dentsu, holding 5.85% of the outstanding stock (16.9 million shares) as of December 2016.[4]
References
edit- ^ "時事通信社会社案内". www.jiji.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 2017-03-17.
- ^ Adelstein, Jake. "What Michael Woodford Saw at Olympus". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
- ^ "Jiji president to quit over plagiarism". The Japan Times Online. 2012-06-20. ISSN 0447-5763. Archived from the original on 2020-07-03. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
- ^ "株式の状況・株主構成 - IR情報 - 電通". www.dentsu.co.jp (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2018-07-01. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
External links
edit- English news site
- Japanese news site
- Corporate site (Japanese)