Flamboyant Japanese professional wrestler-turned-politician Antonio Inoki yesterday died aged 79, according to a company he founded.
His death, which Japanese public broadcaster NHK said was from heart failure, brought to an end a varied life in the public eye, during which Inoki fought Muhammad Ali, fostered close personal ties with North Korea, and helped free hostages in Iraq.
The Yokohama native — born Kanji Inoki — also starred in US wrestling promotions, and served two separate terms in Japan’s legislature.
Photo: AP
US wrestling legend Triple H wrote on Twitter that Inoki was “one of the most important figures in the history of our business, and a man who embodied the term ‘fighting spirit.’”
“The legacy of WWE Hall of Famer Antonio Inoki will live on forever,” the chief operating officer of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) said in a statement.
“Antonio Inoki, the founder of New Japan Pro-Wrestling and former professional wrestler, died in Tokyo,” the group said.
Standing 1.9m tall, Inoki was a pioneer of mixed martial arts in Japan, and shot to fame in 1976 for taking on world heavyweight champion Ali in a zany wrestler-versus-boxer bout in Tokyo.
There followed appearances in the World Wrestling Federation, as WWE was then known.
“One of the key figures in the history of Japanese wrestling, Antonio Inoki was among the most respected men in sports-entertainment and a bona fide legend in his homeland,” the company said yesterday.
In 1989, Inoki was elected as an upper-house lawmaker for the now-defunct Sports and Peace Party.
Prior to the 1990 Gulf War, he traveled to Iraq to secure the release of Japanese hostages.
Having built a strong personal connection with North Korea, Inoki traveled there dozens of times to help resolve the issue of Pyongyang’s abductions of Japanese citizens during the Cold War.
The wrestler said he wanted to “contribute to world peace through sports,” and arranged martial arts and wrestling festivals in North Korea, often meeting high-ranking officials during his visits.
Japanese officials dismissed the trips as a sideshow.
Asked about them at the time, then Japanese-chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga told journalists that Tokyo had a travel ban in place for North Korea, urging the politician to “act appropriately.”
However, Japanese TV news provided blanket coverage of Inoki’s trip and the visits prompted interest, given the lack of details leaking out about life in North Korea.
Inoki, unmistakable from his outsized chin and trademark tie and red scarf, also forced the government to take an official position on aliens when he tabled a question in a budgetary committee in 2017, saying he had seen a mysterious flying object disappearing over the horizon.
Inoki lost his seat in 1995 and retired as a wrestler in 1998, but was re-elected to the Japanese House of Councillors in 2013 as a member of a different opposition party.
He retired from politics in 2019, and a year later said he had been diagnosed with heart disease.
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