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TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan\\\’s public broadcaster NHK said on Wednesday it would train staff on human rights, after a cartoon it broadcast last week to explain race relations in the United States was criticized for depicting stereotypes of African-Americans.
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NHK apologized on June 9 and deleted from its Twitter account an animated film aimed at providing background information for reports on U.S. anti-racism protests.
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While the clip presented black Americans as having legitimate grievances, it featured characters including a muscle-bound black narrator in a white tank top, and a black man in a sleeveless purple suit and fedora playing guitar. The interim head of the U.S. embassy called the caricatures “offensive and insensitive”.
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“We at NHK have decided to retrain our reporters and producers to have a greater awareness of human rights issues,” Yuichi Tabata, Head of International New Division of NHK, said in a statement.
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“Going forward, we will base our news gathering and producing on multiple perspectives. We will also have more in-depth discussions on all themes.”
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NHK also said it would take criticism seriously and make sure not to repeat the same mistake.
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(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko; Editing by Peter Graff)
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