Tsunei Kusunose (楠瀬 常猪 Kusunose Tsunei , February 10, 1899 - June 18, 1988) was the Governor of Hiroshima Prefecture from early 1946 to 1950.
Kusunose was elected to his position as governor at a time when the city of Hiroshima was in destruction following the first use of the nuclear bomb in August 1945. As part of his efforts to reconstruct the city, he held on February 22, 1946, a conference on the future of Hiroshima with the participation of historian Yoshirō Saeki, novelist Yoko Ota, deputy Mayor of Kure Tomiko Koura and others. [1] As governor, he followed a policy of refraining from antagonizing the US military authorities in control of Hiroshima at the time, and supported the suppression by US and Australian troops of the workers' strike in June 1949 in protest of the dismissal of workers of Nihon Seiko company, an event known as the Nikko Incident.[1]
In 1950, he resigned his post as governor to run for a vacant seat in the House of Councillors. He was elected, and served until losing in the 1953 election. During his term in the House of Councillors, in 1952, was one of the initiators of a visit of sympathy by a group of survivors of the atomic attack on Hiroshima to the war criminals kept at Sugamo Prison.[2][3]
Died in 1988 of heart failure.
Yoshiteru Kosakai, Hiroshima Peace Reader (Hiroshima, 1980)
Preceded by Hajime Takano |
Governors of Hiroshima Prefecture 1946–1950 |
Succeeded by Hiroo Ōhara |