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Fusae Ohta : ウィキペディア英語版
Fusae Ohta

Fusae Ohta (太田 房江 ''Ōta Fusae'', born June 2, 1951) is a Japanese politician, a former governor of Osaka prefecture, and the country's first female prefectural governor.
Born in Kure, Hiroshima, she later moved to Toyohashi, Aichi.
After graduating from the University of Tokyo with an economics degree in 1976, Ohta entered the Ministry of International Trade and Industry. She served in MITI until 1997, when she became vice-governor of Okayama prefecture. She returned to the ministry in 1999.
Ohta became governor of Osaka prefecture after the resignation of Knock Yokoyama in 2000. She was re-elected in 2004, and after eight years in office was succeeded by lawyer and TV personality Tōru Hashimoto.
Osaka hosts the March sumo tournament, one of Japan's six major tournaments, and the governor of each prefecture presents the "Governor's Prize" to the champion of each tournament. Given the Sumo Association's view that there was a ban on women entering the Dohyō (ring), and the ring would be "violated" by an "unclean"〔Hindell, Juliet (Sumo excludes woman governor BBC News Online March 1, 2000 ) Retrieved on October 2, 2012〕 woman entering it,〔Green, Shane (Sumo wrestles with its weightiest problem The Sydney Morning Herald, March 15, 2003 ) Retrieved on October 2, 2012〕 she was required to do so on the walkway beside the ring or send a male representative in her place. She repeatedly challenged the Sumo Association's policy by requesting to be allowed to fulfill her traditional role as Governor. Her requests were repeatedly rejected until she stepped down from office.
Ohta's family name has been officially registered as Saitō (齊藤) since her marriage, but she uses her maiden name above for most public purposes.
Ohta's family name is romanized as ''Ohta'' by the URL of her website (ohtafusae.jp), the state government of Hawaii,〔http://www.hawaii.gov/gov/news/photo_archive/photo2003/Photo_Album.2003-08-08.0631/ohta/view〕 the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific,〔http://www.unescap.org/huset/women/swiulg/japan/fusae_ohta.doc〕 Kansai Window,〔(KIPPO NEWS Wednesday, March 24, 2004 )〕 and Dawn Center.〔(Introduction in English (Publications and Programs) :: DawnCenter )〕 The name is romanized as ''Ota'' by WebJapan,〔(Osaka's New Leader | Education and Society | Trends in Japan | Web Japan )〕 the ''Japan Times''〔(Osaka punishes 163 over slush-fund scams | The Japan Times Online )〕 and the BBC.〔(BBC News | ASIA-PACIFIC | Sumo excludes woman governor )〕
==References==

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