Kokusui-kai
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (April 2019) |
The Kokusui-kai ("Patriotic Society") (國粹会), founded in 1958, is a Tokyo-based yakuza organization with an estimated 1000 members.[1] Despite its relatively low membership, it is widely viewed as a wealthy and successful gang, controlling Tokyo's fashionable Ginza district. Its oyabun, or godfather, was Kazuyoshi Kudo until his suicide in February 2007.[2]
The gang had long been a member of the , a federation of Tokyo yakuza groups opposed to the powerful, Kansai-based Yamaguchi-gumi.
This changed in August 2005, when in a surprise move, the Kokusui-kai withdrew from the Kantō alliance and became an affiliate of the Yamaguchi-gumi. The timing of the change was particularly interesting: the Yamaguchi-gumi's new godfather, Kenichi Shinoda, had been installed just weeks before and had made clear his intent to expand into the Kantō region. The merger with the Kokusui-kai, in which Shinoda became sworn brothers with Kazuyoshi Kudo in a sake-sharing ritual, was concrete evidence of the Yamaguchi's expansion.
References[]
- Organizations established in 1958
- 1958 establishments in Japan
- Far-right politics in Japan
- Yakuza groups
- Yamaguchi-gumi
- Japan crime stubs
- Crime stubs