Audio By Carbonatix
The head of the Tokyo Olympics organising committee has resigned after he was criticised for making "inappropriate" remarks about women.
Yoshiro Mori, 83, was quoted as saying women talk too much and that meetings with many female board directors would "take a lot of time".
The remarks set off a firestorm of protest and Mr Mori apologised at the time but said he would not resign.
But on Friday he apologised for his "inappropriate statement".
"What is important is to hold the Olympics from July. It must not be the case that my presence becomes an obstacle to that," he said at a special committee meeting on Friday, where he also announced his resignation.
It is not immediately clear who will replace Mr Mori, a former Japanese prime minister. He had initially selected well-known sports administrator Saburo Kawabuchi, 84, to replace him but this also led to protests.
The resignation came as pressure mounted on him over the past week. Major sponsors came forward to criticise his comments, including Toyota, one of the biggest Olympic backers.
Toyota's president Akio Toyoda said the company was "disappointed".
On Tuesday, a group of female lawmakers wore white in a protest against his remarks, with some men doing the same in solidarity.
And Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said she would not attend a meeting of high-level Olympic officials in protest.
According to local media, almost 400 people have also withdrawn applications to volunteer at the Olympic games, which are scheduled for later this year.
The committee board currently has 24 members, five of whom are women. In 2019, the committee - which is responsible for selecting Japanese Olympians - set itself a goal of increasing the number of female board directors to 40%.
"If we increase the number of female board members, we have to make sure their speaking time is restricted somewhat, they have difficulty finishing, which is annoying," Mr Mori was quoted as saying.
"We have about seven women at the organising committee, but everyone understands their place."
Mr Mori is known in the country for a string of gaffes and undiplomatic statements made while in office from 2000 to 2001.
He told Japan's Mainichi newspaper that female family members had also lambasted him after his comments.
"Last night, my wife gave me a thorough scolding. She said: 'You've said something bad again, haven't you? I'm going to have to suffer again because you've antagonised women'," he said.
"This morning, my daughter and granddaughter scolded me as well," the paper quoted him as saying.
Latest Stories
-
Ethiopia launches construction of largest airport in Africa
12 minutes -
Commercial banks begin Interest rate cuts following Ghana Reference Rate reduction
14 minutes -
Sogakope gets major tourism and transport boost with opening of Royal Shekinah City
19 minutes -
One killed, 37 injured in Suhum–Mankrong highway crash
27 minutes -
Five best young players at AFCON 2025
32 minutes -
The creatives we need: Disruptors and revolutionaries
42 minutes -
GoldBod formalisation yields $3.8bn in FX, far outweighs BoG losses – Report
43 minutes -
Bank of Ghana relieved of gold trading burden by GoldBod
51 minutes -
Agricultural Value Chains and Export Competitiveness: Transforming Ghana Beyond Cocoa
1 hour -
First Atlantic Bank secures regulatory approval to operate in Liberia
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, January 12, 2026
1 hour -
Presidential staffers effectively serve as deputy ministers; Mahama not running a lean gov’t – Miracles Aboagye
2 hours -
Show restraint after Ayawaso East MP’s death; succession talk premature – Walewale MP
2 hours -
Beyond Gold Trading: Study says GoldBod can reshape Ghana’s economic architecture
2 hours -
Cost of living has worsened under NDC after one year – Dennis Miracles Aboagye
2 hours
