Seiji Yoshida
Yūto Yoshida was a Japanese novelist and member of the Japanese Communist Party. He has published under a variety of pen names, including Seiji Yoshida , Tōji Yoshida , and Eiji Yoshida . He wrote "My war crimes", which is the origin of a dispute over comfort women 30 years after World War II; he admitted it was fictional in an interview with Shūkan Shinchō on May 29, 1996. Later, his fictional work was used by George Hicks in his "The Comfort Women: Japan's Brutal Regime of Enforced Prostitution in the Second World War". Naoki Inose sighed over Japan's misfortune suffered by Yoshida's fake book, and he expressed as below; "Due to the influence of only one scammer, the issue of Japan and South Korea was exacerbated, Japanese textbooks were rewritten, and the United Nations even made a report. In a sense, a man named Seiji Yoshida who played with lies can be said to be another Shoko Asahara."