Councilman Komesu to run for Nakagami District seat in 2024 Okinawa Assembly Election. (29au23)


Splendor of Okinawa: Whorled Plantain, roadside Uruma, 27au23


Term limits for some Okinawa Assembly positions will end in June of 2024. As of 27 August, Chatan Town Councilman Seiichiro Komesu (53) has committed to his candidacy as an independent for one of the Nakagami District’s 5 seats in the Prefectural Assembly.

He hopes to succeed the 4-term current holder of that district’s seat, Prefectural Assemblyman Isao Zukeran (68), whose stance is with Governor Denny Tamaki’s ruling administration. Assemblyman Zukeran is bowing out at the end of this term.


With his priority on education and social services, Councilman Komesu pledges, “I’ll work had to solve the various problems emanating from the US Military bases. I further want to  link our revitalization with my plans to promote omnidirectional  exchanges in the Nakagami District.”


Councilman Seiichiro Komesu was born on 9 November 1969 at  Yoshihara in Chatan District. After graduating from Meiji University, he served as a Okinawa Prefecture staff member. In 2021, he ran for a seat in the Chatan Town Council and won. He is now in his second term.

 

Original Japanese article: Ryukyu Shimpo, published Monday 28 August 2023 at 17:49. Byline:  Shinji Sano. https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/4e476bafd4aef9b2bf2809cb8bdc7f63381215a7


Denny in the News: news about Governor Denny Tamaki.


Denny Tamaki is the governor of Okinawa Prefecture in Japan. Although Okinawa is important as an international tourist destination and a key element in strategic US Military Forces, its governor receives very little coverage in the Japanese press and almost none in the English language media. 


This blog hopes to  translate one news article a day on the governor.  It is unsponsored and unauthorized. The translator simply hopes to improve his skills and perhaps give the governor an English speaking audience. 


Any suggestion on improving the translation will be gratefully accepted. However, please leave political comments for another forum.


Where they occur, words and phrases in Ryukyuan (the Okinawan language) are rendered in italics and translated in parentheses. Names  whose readings are uncertain are rendered as Name (=Kanji?) as in Nagayuki (=長行?). Any corrections in such instances would be gratefully appreciated.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In the suit over exercise of proxy in the case of the weak seabed at the new Henoko base, judgment to be handed down on 20 December. (4de23)

Governor Denny receives the report on JUNGLIA at the 4 month mark after its opening. (7de25)

In Okinawa, Candidate Takara takes hold of the Henoko opposition parties as their new face, urging,”Let’s earnestly come to grips with these issues together.” (21jy25).