This is a follow-up to a podcast that I submitted in October 2006 on Blackface in Japan, spearchucker condoms that give you that ol’ negro feeling, Tokyo Metro Government’s racist images used in an official government document , and an interview with event-throwing brothas 6-Figures.

Click on this link, Japan Report 1, to view the podcast.

Here is the new version of the Earthquake Survival Manual. After the big scare earlier this month, the manual provides very useful information for those living or planning to live in Japan or any other earthquake prone area.

BTW, the metro government took a step in the right direction in making the publication for NJ’s but there is still much work to be done in the fight for what’s right in the Land of the Rising Sun! Bonzai and Power to the People!

Konnichi wa! Well, it seems like Jero fever has hit the US press. A nice piece on what the boy wonder is doing in the Land of the Rising Sun.

Here is the link.

Hello! I received this from Debito: “I just received information about a hotline which will be open from 1 to 5pm on Sunday June 1st providing free legal advice to foreigners living in Japan. This is to test the demand for such a service in relation to research by the Japan Law Foundation being made by lawyers, NGOs and researchers on the necessity of starting a specialized law office/center for foreigners/refugees. Interpretation will be provided, in many languages.

If the hotline receives many calls, this will strengthen the case for such a service, which seems to be to be sorely needed.

If you also feel this could be an important service, please pass this information on.

For further information, please contact: Ms. Masako Suzuki on 03-5269-7773, at the Executive Committee for Foreigners Legal Counseling (c/o ALT Law Firm).”

HERE IS THE INFORMATION:

Free Legal Telephone Counseling for Foreigners/Refugees - By lawyers in different languages -

We, the Executive Committee for Foreigners Legal Counseling, have planned a one-day free legal telephone counseling for foreigners and refugees. Such a nationwide free legal telephone counseling focused on foreigners/refugees by lawyers has never been held so far.

More than 10 lawyers will join this event and multilingual interpretation service will be provided. This event is held in cooperation with the Center for Multilingual Multicultural Education and Research of Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, the Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan, the Catholic Tokyo International Center (CTIC), Japan Association for Refugees (JAR), and the House in Emergency of Love and Peace (HELP).

Up to now, specialized legal consultations for foreigners/refugees are available only in regions around big city areas. The purpose of this event is to make it possible for foreigners who have difficulty accessing legal consultation to consult with lawyers.

It would be highly appreciated if you can help us disseminate information regarding this significant event. Please feel free to contact us at the following contact for any questions or further information.
This event has been planned in relation to the research of the Japan Law Foundation being made by lawyers, NGOs and researchers on the necessity of starting a specialized law office/center for foreigners/
refugees, to cope with the rapid increase of the non-citizen population in Japan.

Date: Sunday June 1, 2008 13:00 – 17:00
Tel: 03-3547-0300

Languages Available: Japanese, English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Tagalog, Thai, Russian, Indonesian, Burmese, Romanian and others.

Contact: Executive Committee for Foreigners Legal Counseling (c/o ALT Law Firm) Tel:03-5269-7773?Fax:03-5312-4543

MULTILINGUAL POSTER AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD IN PDF FORMAT AT:
http://www.debito.org/legaladviceforNJ.pdf

Wow! I was pleased to see that my response, “Let the SDF Deploy Overseas,” to an Opinion Editorial (Op Ed) piece in the Japan Times was published in the Readers in Council section on Sunday, May 25, 2008. I decided last month to not only dedicate more time to finishing off the dragon a.k.a. “my book” but to write for a broader audience. I will take this as a good start.

I was also very happy to find out that a magazine in Paris wants to do a story on me and Black Tokyo for their upcoming edition. The story will present Black Tokyo to a broader demographic since the magazine is distributed in Paris, Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Kyoto, Hong Kong, Auckland, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New Haven, various parts of the U.K., Milano, Rome, and Sweden.
 
Here the link to my response. As always, I welcome any feedback (good or bad)! The introduction to my response is posted below: 

“Craig Martin’s May 21 article, “Permanent SDF overseas deployment law endangers democracy,” was an extreme pleasure to read, although I do not agree with everything in it.

It’s 2008 and Japan has the second strongest military force in Asia, continues to spend 1 percent of its GDP on defense, has acquired some pretty neat military toys (and sells a few using a broad interpretation of “aid”), has redeployed newer fighter aircraft to its base in Okinawa, wants to acquire the F-22 Raptor, and will have a few helicopter “carriers” that will allow the Self-Defense Forces to project their “defense” closer to China.” (click the link below for the rest of the article)

Konnichi wa BT’ers! The post below was submitted by Ato in the ” Jero Enka Singer” thread on the Black Tokyo Forum. I like MANY other people of the Afro persuasion understands where he is coming from. Feel free to post your comments here or in the BT Forum.
————————- Ato’s post ————————  
Thank God! 

Anyone that is black and lives in Japan must be breathing a sigh of relief now that Jero (sans hip-hop regalia) is advertising something on TV in an adult, serious manner. I felt a certain sense of pride. He is now the new face of Kirin Beverage’s canned coffee product Kirin Fire Cafe Zero. The ad began rotation on May 21.

For too long Bobby Ologun (and Bob Sapp) have been the face of blacks here in Japan and unfortunately a large percentage of Japanese out there couldn’t be bothered to learn anything about a race or culture besides what is fed to them on TV. Fueling this is the ease with which one can become a TV personality and household name here in Japan; just find a gimmick and you’ll be on the tube schmoozing and tasting oishii delicacies with celebreties in no time.
Unfortunately for blacks in Japan, Ologun’s “gimmick” has been one of feigned stupidity and the stereotypes have only been reinforced as a result. Enter Jero, a young, reasonably attractive man of black heritage, breathing a new life into a Japanese art form from yesteryear that even Japanese young people lack interest in. In sharp contrast to Ologun’s purposely mispronounced Japanese, Jero croons enka perfectly enough to make even the most battle-hardened baabaa swoon.
Jero’s earlier “hip-hop” image will probably now be relegated to a foot-in-the-door strategy (hopefully) as the Japanese marketing machine sinks their claws into him. No doubt countless contracts have been signed to control and mold his image and likeness. I for one like the new look (at least in the ad): sleek, adult, silver and most importantly of all - serious.  

Does this mark the beginning of the end of negative stereotyping and poor opinions of blacks in Japan? I for one certainly hope so…

Here’s his blog:
http://blog.goo.ne.jp/jeroenka/e/227bdcb90303f199c3f6c6e35b5611cf

 

Arigato and Okini to those that sent email thanking me for the list of language and resource links. I found out that MANY lurkers hit the BT Forum and Blog. Hopefully, they will post about their experiences in Japan or even ask a question or two about Japan from the Afro (or non-Afro) perspective!

Thanks again for your support!

The article below written by CRAIG MARTIN, Special to The Japan Times, was a extreme pleasure to read. Why? Well, I guess you can say that I do not agree with everything. The piece provided a nice break from my research and gives me a chance to pour out the Jim Jones punch and go against the grain.

It’s 2008, Japan has the second strongest force in Asia, continues to spend 1% of its GDP on defense (you do the math), has acquired some pretty neat military toys (and sells a few using a broad interpretation of “aid”), redeployed newer fighter aircraft to its base in Okinawa, wants to acquire the F-22 Raptor, will have a few helicopter “carriers” that will allow the JSDF to PROJECT its -ahem!- defense closer to China and “future” strategic reserves thus allowing its shiny AEGIS cruisers something else to track, and finally has a MINISTRY of Defense (still waiting for that National Security Council though).

Is the writer saying that Japan should never become a normal country and not have the right to collective self-defense? Wouldn’t this help ease the Okinawa mondai (problem)? Maybe provide a since of pride in the fretta (slackers) in Japan. How about stroking the flames of nationalism when World Cup or Olympic fans have nothing to do? Who knows, just inquiring!

I believe that Japan has used Article 9 and the Yoshida Doctrine to slowly and efficiently build up its Self Defense Force while enjoying or tolerating the collective-protectionism of the United States. While some say that the US should leave Japan or get out of Asia entirely, many Asian nations do not want to see the return of “Imperial” Japanese Forces, especially forces that can go nuclear. Yes, there are current territorial disputes, false claims in textbooks, the comfort woman issue, and the huge task that Hello Kitty must take on to promote Japan, Inc. in a manner pleasing to those that fall sway to Japan’s soft power. I just wonder what Japan should do once India and China flex their power in regions strategic to the United States and Japan’s interests? Has anyone noticed the current scramble for better “relations” with Africa by the US, China, Japan, and India? What are the implications?

I say let Japan deploy their troops overseas. I expected this debate to rear its ugly little head again when the SDF went on their test run in Iraq. The first Gulf War was an exercise in checkbook diplomacy for Japan. This time around with the Global War on Terror, Japan got their fingernails dirty so the next logical move is lend a hand.

Bottom line for me is that the relevance of an undemocratic China’s rising power and expanding role and India’s “ambition” in the international system can be deemed “dangerous” to the global interests of the United States. China will continue to challenge US foreign policy decisions by using both economic and military power (although militarily they still have some work to do). But let’s face it, the rise of China and India is unavoidable. I feel that it is in the US and Japan’s interests to have Japan return to normal status and deploy its forces overseas. I will give additional reasons later but I hope to receive some feedback from the BT readers. Read the rest of this entry »

visit the past to know the new

The phrase above in a broad translation is, “a study of the classics is the springboard for new research.” There are many Japanese phrases that use four kanji that students of Japanese will find useful. The article that I provide below gives a pretty good reason to learn four-kanji phrase. Be sure to check out Roger’s series in the Japan Times. Enjoy!

Article begins:  You may give yourself heart and soul to something, being focused and determined. Yet, you fail and you have no one to blame but yourself. Well, perhaps it’s no consolation, but you can at least learn how to express what happened to you in Japanese.

The most common phrase to express the fact that you have tried as hard as you can is isshokenmei. Isshokenmei ni yarimashita means, “I gave it everything I had.” But if you brought failure down on your own head, you might say, jigojitoku da. If someone else says this of you, it has the not-so-subtle nuance of “You made your bed, now lie in it!” Not so nice, perhaps, but you’ve no choice but to stew in your own juice.

What we are dealing with in the two expressions above are phrases made up of four kanji. There are hundreds of four-kanji phrases in common use in Japanese. These are by no means easy to learn for the nonnative speaker (and not so easy for the native speaker either!). But if you wish to truly master Japanese, I recommend these to you. They will turn a competent speaker of Japanese into a highly articulate one.

I will be discussing these four-kanji phrases in two articles. This week I bring up phrases of practical use in everyday life. Next week I’ll concentrate on those of a more philosophical or abstract bent.

These phrases cover the entire gamut of emotions; and in fact, the Japanese expression closest to “gamut of emotions” is the four-kanji phrase kidoairaku. If you look at the meaning of the four kanji in this phrase, you will see why this really does run the gamut: ki is happiness;do, anger; ai, misery; and raku, pleasure.

This is an excellent example of how brilliantly concise and expressive these four-kanji phrases are. In a single burst of sound they tell an entire emotional story.

Most people long to have a fulfilling family life, and the Japanese, of course, are no exception in wishing to have ikkadanran, which translates almost literally as “one big happy family,” expressing the state of family bliss that presumably occurs when all members are together.

Sometimes, however, when family members get together, things of a very frank nature are said. If you want to say something point-blank, say it tantochokunyu ni. This is a way of saying something without beating around the bush. This four-kanji phrase literally means something akin to “wielding the sword by yourself and sticking it straight in,” a highly colorful way of expressing frankness. If not flesh, at least words are not being minced here.

The Japanese have quite a number of four-kanji phrases meaning “to be out at sea, totally lost, groping in the dark.” I can think of at least three common ones. If you use all three skillfully, people will think you are the most articulate disoriented person they have ever met.

1. Anchumosaku, literally, “groping in the dark”

2. Gorimuchu, ”five miles in a fog”

3. Bozenjishitsu, ”so much in a daze you have lost sight of yourself”

The Japanese love it when you tell them how dizzily disoriented you are over things, especially over one Japanese custom or another.

Of course, not all of these four-kanji phrases are so useful. They are a mixed bag, which, by the way, in Japanese is gyokusekikonko. This phrase literally means “a jumble of jewels and rocks.”

One way to stretch yourself in any language is to speak above your level, that is, to use expressions that generally only a native speaker would. Then, one day, you will wake up and find yourself speaking like one. The goal of everyone learning a foreign language is to use that language freely and effortlessly, jiyujizai ni tsukaikonaseru, the closest equivalent to “fluently.”

Mastering four-kanji phrases is, to my mind, the best way of achieving that effortless freedom.

Isshokenmei ni yaru shika nai or there’s no other way but to give it everything you’ve got.

Source credit: Roger Pulvers, Special to the Japan Times 

Learn more about Japan and Japanese by reading Namiko’s blog here.

I have spent most of the past 15 years in the dark side of the rising sun. Until three years ago, I was a crime reporter for the Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan’s largest newspaper, and covered a roster of characters that included serial killers who doubled as pet breeders, child pornographers who abducted junior high-school girls, and the John Gotti of Japan.

I came to Japan in 1988 at age 19, spent most of college living in a Zen Buddhist temple, and then became the first U.S. citizen hired as a regular staff writer for a Japanese newspaper in Japanese. If you know anything about Japan, you’ll realize how bizarre this is — a gaijin, or foreigner, covering Japanese cops. When I started the beat in the early 1990s, I knew nothing about the yakuza, a.k.a. the Japanese mafia. But following their prostitution rings and extortion rackets became my life.

Most Americans think of Japan as a law-abiding and peaceful place, as well as our staunch ally, but reporting on the underworld gave me a different perspective. Mobs are legal entities here. Their fan magazines and comic books are sold in convenience stores, and bosses socialize with prime ministers and politicians. And as far as the United States is concerned, Japan may be refueling U.S. warships at sea, but it’s not helping us fight our own battles against organized crime — a realization that led to my biggest scoop.

I loved my job. The cops fighting organized crime are hard-drinking iconoclasts — many look like their mobster foes, with their black suits and slicked-back hair. They’re outsiders in Japanese society, and perhaps because I was an outsider too, we got along well. The yakuza’s tribal features are also compelling, like those of an alien life form: the full-body tattoos, missing digits and pseudo-family structure. I became so fascinated that, like someone staring at a wild animal, I got too close and now am worried for my life. But more on that later.

The Japanese National Police Agency (NPA) estimates that the yakuza have almost 80,000 members. The most powerful faction, the Yamaguchi-gumi, is known as “the Wal-Mart of the yakuza” and reportedly has close to 40,000 members. In Tokyo alone, the police have identified more than 800 yakuza front companies: investment and auditing firms, construction companies and pastry shops. The mobsters even set up their own bank in California, according to underworld sources.

Over the last seven years, the yakuza have moved into finance. Japan’s Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission has an index of more than 50 listed companies with ties to organized crime. The market is so infested that Osaka Securities Exchange officials decided in March that they would review all listed companies and expel those found to have links with the yakuza. If you think this has nothing to do with the United States, think again. Americans have billions of dollars in the Japanese stock market. So U.S. investors could be funding the Japanese mob.

I once asked a detective from Osaka why, if Japanese law enforcement knows so much about the yakuza, the police don’t just take them down. “We don’t have a RICO Act,” he explained. “We don’t have plea-bargaining, a witness-protection program or witness-relocation program. So what we end up doing most of the time is just clipping the branches. . . . If the government would give us the tools, we’d shut them down, but we don’t have ‘em.”

In the good old days, the yakuza made most of their money from sleaze: prostitution, drugs, protection money and child pornography. Kiddie porn is still part of their base income — and another area where Japan isn’t acting like America’s friend.

In 1999, my editors assigned me to cover the Tokyo neighborhood that includes Kabukicho, Japan’s largest red-light district. Japan had recently outlawed child pornography — reluctantly, after international pressure left officials no choice. But the ban, which is still in effect, had a major flaw: It criminalized producing and selling child pornography, not owning it. So the big-money industry goes on, unabated. Last month’s issue of a widely available porn magazine proclaimed, “Our Cover Girl Is Our Youngest Yet: 14!” Kabukicho remains loaded with the stuff, and teenage sex workers are readily available. I’ve even seen specialty stores that sell the underwear worn by teenage strippers.

The ban is so weak that investigating yakuza who peddle child pornography is practically impossible. “The United States has referred hundreds of . . . cases to Japanese law enforcement authorities,” a U.S. embassy spokesman recently told me. “Without exception, U.S. officials have been told that the Japanese police cannot open an investigation because possession is legal.” In 2007, the Internet Hotline Center in Japan identified more than 500 local sites displaying child pornography.

There’s talk in Japan of criminalizing simple possession, but some political parties (and publishers, who are raking in millions) oppose the idea. U.S. law enforcement officers want to stop the flow of yakuza-produced child porn into the United States and would support such a law. But they can’t even keep the yakuza themselves out of the country. Why? Because the national police refuse to share intelligence. Last year, a former FBI agent told me that, in a decade of conferences, the NPA had turned over the names and birthdates of about 50 yakuza members. “Fifty out of 80,000,” he said.

This lack of cooperation was partly responsible for an astonishing deal made with the yakuza, and for the story that changed my life. On May 18, 2001, the FBI arranged for Tadamasa Goto — a notorious Japanese gang boss, the one that some federal agents call the “John Gotti of Japan” — to be flown to the United States for a liver transplant.

Goto is alive today because of that operation — a source of resentment among Japanese law enforcement officials because the FBI organized it without consulting them. From the U.S. point of view, it was a necessary evil. The FBI had long suspected the yakuza of laundering money in the United States, and Japanese and U.S. law enforcement officials confirm that Goto offered to tip them off to Yamaguchi-gumi front companies and mobsters in exchange for the transplant. James Moynihan, then the FBI representative in Tokyo who brokered the deal, still defends the operation. “You can’t monitor the activities of the yakuza in the United States if you don’t know who they are,” he said in 2007. “Goto only gave us a fraction of what he promised, but it was better than nothing.”

The suspicions about the Yamaguchi-gumi were confirmed in the fall of 2003, when special agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), whom I’ve interviewed, tracked down several million dollars deposited in U.S. casino accounts and banks by Susumu Kajiyama, a boss known as “the Emperor of Loan Sharks.” The agents said they had not received a lead from the Tokyo police; they got some of the information while looking back at the Goto case.

Unlike their Japanese counterparts, U.S. law enforcement officers are sharing tips with Japan. Officials from both countries confirm that, in November 2003, the Tokyo police used information from ICE and the Nevada Gaming Control Board to seize $2 million dollars in cash from a safe-deposit box in Japan, which was leased to Kajiyama by a firm affiliated with a major Las Vegas casino. According to ICE Special Agent Mike Cox, the Kajiyama saga was probably not an isolated incident. “If we had some more information from the Japan side,” he told me last year, “I’m sure we’d find other cases like it.”

I’m not entirely objective on the issue of the yakuza in my adopted homeland. Three years ago, Goto got word that I was reporting an article about his liver transplant. A few days later, his underlings obliquely threatened me. Then came a formal meeting. The offer was straightforward. “Erase the story or be erased,” one of them said. “Your family too.”

I knew enough to take the threat seriously. So I took some advice from a senior Japanese detective, abandoned the scoop and resigned from the Yomiuri Shimbun two months later. But I never forgot the story. I planned to write about it in a book, figuring that, with Goto’s poor health, he’d be dead by the time it came out. Otherwise, I planned to clip out the business of his operation at the last minute.

I didn’t bargain on the contents leaking out before my book was released, which is what happened last November. Now the FBI and local law enforcement are watching over my family in the States, while the Tokyo police and the NPA look out for me in Japan. I would like to go home, but Goto has a reputation for taking out his target and anyone else in the vicinity.

In early March, in my presence, an FBI agent asked the NPA to provide a list of all the members of Goto’s organization so that they could stop them from coming into the country and killing my family. The NPA was reluctant at first, citing “privacy concerns,” but after much soul-searching handed over about 50 names. But the Tokyo police file lists more than 900 members. I know this because someone posted the file online in the summer of 2007; a Japanese detective was fired because of the leak.

Of course, I’m a little biased. I don’t think it’s selfish of me to value the safety of my family more than the personal privacy of crooks. And as a crime reporter, I’m baffled that the Japanese don’t share intelligence on the yakuza with the United States.

Then again, perhaps I’m being unreasonable. Maybe some powerful Japanese are simply ashamed of how strong the yakuza have become. And if they’re not ashamed, they should be.

——————————-
Jake Adelstein is the author of the forthcoming “Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan.” The writer’s email: jla.japan@gmail.com

Posted from the article This Mob Is Big in Japan by Jake Adelstein of The Washington Post ,Sunday, May 11, 2008; B02

Source link

TOKYO (Various Sources) - A U.S. court martial sentenced Marine Staff Sergeant Tyrone Hadnott (38) to four years in prison on Friday for sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl on the southern island of Okinawa, in a case that has sparked widespread public anger. The case was a painful reminder for many of the gang rape of a 12-year-old girl by U.S. Marines in Okinawa in 1995, which provoked a wave of opposition to their presence

Hadnott was arrested by Japanese police on suspicion of rape following the incident in February, but released after the girl withdrew her complaint, a move some in Okinawa said was to escape public attention.Japanese prosecutors declined to indict Hadnott after the teenager dropped the case, apparently because she did not want to be in the public glare. The military then took up the case.

In February, Hadnott, who lived off base, picked up the girl on a motorbike and took her to his home. When she started crying, he offered to drive her to her home and allegedly raped her in his car, according to Japanese police.

Hadnott admitted touching the victim’s underwear but denied raping her. “I touched her in a sexual manner over clothing. I was gratifying my sexual desire, sir. (There is) no excuse for my action and no way to express how sorry I am,” he said.

During the court martial at Camp Foster, presiding judge Lieutenant Colonel David Oliver said Hadnott was “ignorant of her true age” but suggested he should have made more effort to find out.

Hadnott had only one witness, his mother, who told the court that his learning disability and mental immaturity must have led to the misconduct. “For the Marine Corps of the United States, Japan, and for the family involved, I’m so, sorry,” she said, weeping into a handkerchief as Hadnott rubbed his eyes.

The jury cleared Hadnott of rape and other charges including kidnapping through luring. Hadnott pleaded guilty only to abusive sexual contact, although he had faced a maximum of 15 years in prison for it.

Hadnott’s four year sentence means that he will serve three years in confinement, with the remaining one year suspended under a plea-bargain. He also will be given a dishonorable discharge at the half-day trial, a spokesman for Okinawa Marines said.

Even though Hadnott was not prosecuted under the Japanese judicial system, the US Marine Corps found that there was enough evidence to prosecute him under the U.S. system.

My reaction (under the name Afro Eric, A.E.) to the Hadnott case , as well as crime statistics, can be found here and here.

Here is a story on the reaction in Okinawa:


By Chiyomi Sumida, Stars and Stripes, Pacific edition, Sunday, May 18, 2008[/quote]

NAHA, Okinawa — Okinawans had mixed reactions to Friday’s court-martial and sentencing of Marine Staff Sgt. Tyrone Hadnott, who was given 48 months of confinement and a dishonorable discharge for molesting a 14-year-old Okinawa girl in February.

“I do not quite get it,” said Shigeko Urasaki, a representative of an Okinawa women’s advocacy group, Women’s Net. “The sentence is too light for the vicious nature of the crime. What were the extenuating circumstances for his behavior?”

There were none, she said, adding that she regretted Hadnott was not tried under Japanese law. Japanese prosecutors decided to drop the case after the 14-year-old girl who accused Hadnott of raping her withdrew her complaint.

The girl said she did not want any more publicity.

Two men questioned in downtown Naha agreed the sentence seemed too light.

“He was lucky that the girl withdrew the complaint,” said Kenji Kawasumi, 33, a Web designer from Tokyo. “Had he not been a servicemember, there would not have been so much media coverage, and the girl would not have changed her mind.”

Said his friend, Akitoshi Funo, 38, owner of a business equipment sales company in Naha: “A three-year jail term is the same as the punishment for gambling in Japan. Is that all? It is almost like treating the seriousness of the crime as little more than being caught gambling.”

A woman in her mid-40s in Ginowan, however, said she had mixed feelings about whether the sentence was too light.

“It’s hard to say, because at first she was not taken against her will,” said the woman, who identified herself only by her last name of Matsumoto. “My biggest concern is for Okinawa’s society, where many underage children hang around late at night.

“Anyhow, it was the fault of the man, an adult. I cannot say if the sentence is long enough or not. All I want is for him to serve his prison term and pay for the crime.”

Here is the Hadnott incident timeline:

Japan and the United States yesterday held a meeting of their intergovernmental joint committee to discuss the lack of information about a U.S. military deserter in connection with a taxicab driver slain in the city of Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture.

In the meeting, the Japanese and U.S. governments agreed to quicken procedures to acknowledge desertion. Based on the agreement, the United States will immediately inform Japan about deserters or US military personnel that are absent without leave (AWOL) and ask Japanese police authorities to arrest them. The U.S. side will provide as much information as possible, including the name, birth date, nationality, rank and photo of the personnel concerned, the Foreign Ministry said.

Senior Vice Foreign Minister Itsunori Onodera revealed the agreement in a press conference yesterday. The U.S. military used to take up to about 30 days to acknowledge a deserter. From now on, the U.S. military is expected to acknowledge a deserter within a day or two after that deserter’s whereabouts became unknown. 

It should be noted that under military code of law, a service member would be automatically considered a deserter 30 days after going missing, and in cases less than 30 days, the U.S. authorities would determine whether s/he deserted or went missing. So after thirty days of being AWOL, a service member is dropped from the rolls and classified as a deserter—administratively, not legally, for that takes a court-martial. At that point, a federal warrant is issued for his arrest. Once a deserter is apprehended or turns himself in, s/he can be returned to his unit, or court-martialed and given jail time, or given nonjudicial punishment and an other-than-honorable discharge. 

Okay, back to the main story. The U.S. agreed to this new condition, based on a special Japanese criminal law related to the bilateral Status of Forces Agreement, in the wake of a recent spate of serious crimes allegedly committed by servicemen. It seems that the Japanese and U.S. governments are making an attempt to improve the Japan-U.S. Status of Forces Agreement’s implementation. Presently, the Japan-U.S. Status-of-Forces Agreement does not require the U.S. side to inform Japan of any deserters or missing troops, but Onodera said Thursday’s agreement was made as part of improved implementation of the accord, which governs the operations of U.S. Forces Japan.

Since 2005, nine U.S. service members have deserted U.S. bases or units in Japan, four of whom were arrested by Japanese police and another two by the U.S. military. Two voluntarily returned to their units and one still remains missing, according to the Foreign Ministry.

Finally, the Japanese and U.S. governments have also agreed on new arrangements for the U.S. forces to reveal information on personnel and families living off base, in light of an alleged rape case in Okinawa in February.

Click here to learn more about the deserter that murdered the cab driver.

Sources: Various

 

With the recent spat of criminal and alledged criminal acts committed by US Forces Japan on Okinawa and Mainland Japan, I think that I should renew the Black Tokyo Forum discussions on the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), the Okinawa-mondai (problem), and the “ura” behind the scenes or underground happenings in Japan.  

I am sure that many BT’ers remember the Woodland rape case. Here is an excerpt from Time Magazine: 

Okinawa hates America, and Okinawa loves America. Okinawa is in fact so American that it can appear deceptively like home to the 25,203 U.S. servicemen stationed on its 38 U.S. military facilities.

Tourists and dream seekers from the Japanese mainland flock to the archipelago’s 60 tropical islands–called Okinawa, like the main island–precisely for its slice of red, white and blue. The biggest draws, especially for Japanese women, are the real live Americans. Amejo is local slang for girls who love Americans, but amejo can be found anywhere in Japan where Americans hang out. However, ground zero for amejo and their kokujo subculture is Okinawa.

When a suspect is black and from the military, people here assume he must be guilty,” says Annette Eddie-Callagain, an African-American lawyer. “Meanwhile, whenever something happens, the rest of us think, Oh, please, don’t let him be black.” Eddie-Callagain and two Japanese lawyers represent Woodland, who has pleaded not guilty and argues that the sex was consensual. Eddie-Callagain admits the politically charged atmosphere and the Japanese judicial system stack the odds against her client. “Here you’re guilty until proved innocent,” says Eddie-Callagain, who returned to Okinawa in 1995 to set up an independent practice after leaving the Air Force. “In Japan the criminal-justice system is run by prosecutors,” she says. “Defense lawyers are just bystanders.”"  (Source)

The current case in Okinawa (video) deals with a Marine originally charged with kidnapping and rape of a 14 year old girl.

Under the Japanese Penal Code, sexual contact with girls aged below 13 constitutes rape regardless of whether they consent to such acts.

The charges were dropped by the girl and the prosecutors (VERY RARE) but the US Marine Corps will try (and rightly convict) the Marine under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. 

Be sure to submit additional comments on this topic at the BT Forums. I will submit updates and BT’ers comments here on the BT Blog.

Arudou Debito & Higuchi Akira

A new bilingual book by lawyer Higuchi Akira and author-activist Arudou Debito went on sale in March 2008. The book includes advice on securing stable visas, establishing businesses and secure jobs, resolving legal problems, and planning for the future from entry into Japan to death.?In this extract, they explain the rationale behind the project and offer advice for how to deal with problems in Japan and integrate into Japanese society.

Migration of labor is an un-ignorable reality in this globalizing world. Japan is no exception. In recent years, Japan has had record numbers of registered foreigners, international marriages, and people receiving permanent residency. This guidebook is designed to help non-Japanese settle in Japan, and become more secure residents and contributors to Japanese society.

For detailed information on the book, the preface, and excerpts (see below) click here.

Chapter One: ARRIVING IN JAPAN
1 - Understanding the structure of the Japanese Visa System (the difference between “Visa”, “Status of Residence” (SOR) and “Certificate of Eligibility” (COE))
2 - Procedures for coming to Japan
- Acquiring SOR from outside Japan
- Changing or acquiring SOR from inside Japan
- Chart summarizing Visa, COE, and SOR
3 - Procedures after you came to Japan
- Bringing your family over to Japan
- Leaving Japan temporarily
- Extending your stay in Japan
- Changing jobs in Japan
- Changing SOR so you can work
- Chart summarizing Immigration procedures
4 - What kinds of Status of Residence are there?
- Chart outlining all 27 possible SOR
- Recommendations for specific jobs
- Requirements for select Statuses of Residence
5 - What if you overstay or work without proper status?
- Recent changes to Immigration law
- Examples of unintended violations
- Our advice if you overstay your SOR
6 - Getting Permanent Residency and Japanese Nationality
- Chart summarizing the requirements and differences between the two
7 - Conclusions and final advice on how to make your SOR stable

Chapter Four: WHAT TO DO IF… RESOLVING PROBLEMS
LIFESTYLE: FAMILY MATTERS:
…if you want to get married
…if you want to register your children in Japanese schools
…if you want to register your newborn Japanese children with non-Japanese names
…if you have a problem (such as ijime bullying) in your children’s schools
…if you want to change your children’s schools
…if you suffer from Domestic Violence
…if you want to get divorced
…if you are having visitation, child custody, or child support problems
…if you are a pregnant out of wedlock by a Japanese man

Click here for additional information on the author and his activist activities in Japan.

===================================

Book synopsis follows:

===================================
“HANDBOOK FOR NEWCOMERS, MIGRANTS, AND IMMIGRANTS TO JAPAN”
ISBN: 978-4-7503-2741-9
Authors: HIGUCHI Akira and ARUDOU Debito
Languages: English and Japanese
Publisher: Akashi Shoten Inc., Tokyo
On sale from March 15, 2008
372 Pages. Price: 2300 yen (2415 yen after tax)
Goal: To help non-Japanese entrants become residents and immigrants
Topics: Securing stable visas, Establishing businesses and secure jobs, Resolving legal problems, Planning for the future through to death…

===================================

TO ORDER: Click here! (Note: Depending on the interest generated by my BT readers, I will try to sell the handbook in the USA via my company if I can reach an agreement with Debito and the publisher .)

The map above is to Fuchu Prison in Tokyo. I posted this after reading an article in the Japan Times today. With the rash of trouble happening more often than not in the land of Gaijin-san, it could not have come at a better time. Here is the article: 
On April 1, 2006, Nihon Shiho Shien Senta (Japan Legal Support Center) or Ho Terasu (Law Terrace) was established to offer people easy access to legal services. It began operation on Oct. 2 that year. Although two years have passed, only 22 percent of those recently polled know of Ho Terrace. More publicity is needed.

The center was established with government money on the basis of the comprehensive legal support law. It has 50 local offices and additional smaller branches. It has 96 lawyers working at about 60 locations, and has contracts with about 13,000 lawyers nationwide. In fiscal 2007, the center provided about 220,000 pieces of information to people who sought help, and assigned lawyers to serve in about 6,700 cases involving criminal suspects, about 71,000 cases involving criminal defendants and about 200 cases involving juvenile delinquents.

Anyone who has legal problems can dial the center’s call center — 0570-078374 — although it charges ¥8.5 per three minutes. (English is OK.) Those who have become crime victims can call 0570-079714. The center’s homepage has been updated recently. It has a question and answer section listing more than 100 types of basic legal problems. Unfortunately, the homepage appears only in Japanese.

The center’s services include providing free-of-charge legal advice by lawyers or judicial scriveners to those involved in civil lawsuits, having these law experts serve in civil lawsuits or negotiations, and lending money to low-income people to pay for lawyers or judicial scriveners.

The center is not free of problems. When the scope of cases to which court-appointed lawyers can be assigned is expanded in May 2009, the center says it will need to more than triple the number of its own lawyers. To secure enough lawyers, the center will have to rethink contract conditions for hiring lawyers. At present, lawyers can work at the center for a maximum 10 years. A system to ensure a longer tenure is needed.

Here is a list of English-speaking lawyers in Japan.  

Here is a list of companies or individuals that provide language support.

If you need to translate a webpage from Japanese to English (and to/from other languages) click here for information.

I hope that you will not have to use the map nor the resources! Well, maybe the webpage translator is fine.

Wow! This is big news.  Here is some background information posted by the US Department of State regarding parental-abduction in Japan.  The gist of the matter is that Japan is not a party to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction.  Japanese civil law stresses that in cases where custody cannot be reached by agreement between the parents, the Japanese Family Court will resolve the issue based on the best interests of the child. However, compliance with Family Court rulings is essentially voluntary, which renders any ruling unenforceable unless both parents agree. Guess what that usually means? 

Here is the article:

Japan will sign a treaty obliging the government to return to the rightful parent children of broken international marriages who are wrongfully taken and kept in Japan, sources said Friday.

The Justice Ministry will begin work to review current laws with an eye on meeting requirements under the 1980 Hague Convention on Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, the sources said. The government plans to conclude the treaty as early as in 2010.

The decision was reached amid criticism against Japan over unauthorized transfer and retention cases involving children. The governments of Canada and the United States have raised the issue with Japan and cited a number of incidents involving their nationals, blasting such acts as tantamount to abductions.

In one case, a Japanese woman who divorced her Canadian husband took their children to Japan for what she said would be a short visit to let the kids see an ailing grandparent. But the woman and her children never returned to Canada.

Once parents return to their home countries with their children, their former spouses are often unable to find their children. In Japan, court rulings and custody orders issued in foreign countries are not recognized.

Under the convention, signatory parties are obliged to set up a “central authority” within their government. The authority works two ways.

It can demand other governments return children unlawfully transferred and retained. But it is also obliged to find the location within its own country of a child unlawfully taken and retained, take measures to prevent the child from being moved out of the country, and support legal procedures to return the child to the rightful parent.

Sources said the Japanese government will likely set up a central authority within the Justice Ministry, which oversees immigration and family registry records. The ministry has decided to work on a new law that will detail the procedures for the children’s return.

In 2006, there were about 44,700 marriages between Japanese and foreign nationals in Japan, about 1.5 times the number in 1996. Divorces involving such couples more than doubled from about 8,000 in 1996 to 17,000 in 2006.

SOURCE:  BY MIAKO ICHIKAWA , THE ASAHI SHIMBUN (IHT/Asahi: May 10,2008)

*** Click here for additional information and discussion! ***

The Japan Child Abduction website can be found here.

Addition background from the Japan Children Right’s Network is posted here.