Former Japan head coach Vahid Halilhodzic returned to Tokyo on Saturday to seek the reason for his shock dismissal earlier in the month.

"I've always been glad to come to Japan, but the situation I'm in now is very unusual," Halilhodzic, 65, said in tears upon his arrival in Japan for the first time since he was sacked. "I still don't understand what's going on. I came here to find out the reason."

The Japan Football Association fired Halilhodzic at the beginning of April with two months remaining before the start of the World Cup finals in Russia, citing a lack of confidence among the squad members. The JFA appointed former technical director Akira Nishino for the job until the end of the World Cup finals.

"(The JFA) drove me away and disposed of me like tossing something in the garbage can," he told more than 100 reporters at Tokyo's Haneda airport.

(Ex-Japan coach Vahid Halildhozic returned to Tokyo on Saturday.)

Halilhodzic, who became manager in 2015 and led Japan in qualifying for their sixth straight World Cup, will hold a press conference in Tokyo on Friday to tell his side of the story.

"I need to fight against whatever offends my pride. It's still not over," he said.

JFA chairman Kozo Tashima expressed his understanding regarding the Bosnian talking to the press but emphasized it will not change the situation.

"I don't think it's a problem for (Halilhodzic) to say what he wants to," Tashima said Friday night in Amman, Jordan. "We just have to continue with what we're doing, having been diligent in following procedure."

Japan play their first World Cup match against Colombia in Group H on June 19, before facing Senegal on June 24. The Samurai Blue's final group stage opponent is world No. 6 Poland on June 28.