Prefecture's governor vows to take anything necessary to
block construction of American military camp
By Nadia Prupis published on Commondreams.org on December
26, 2015.
Protesters in Tokyo rally against the proposed construction
of the Henoko base in 2014. (Photo: AFP)
Okinawa officials on Friday filed
a lawsuit against the central Japanese government in a new bid to
block the slated construction of a U.S. military base in the prefecture's
Henoko region.
"We will do whatever it takes to stop the new Henoko
base," Okinawa Gov. Takeshi Onaga said during a press conference Friday.
"Okinawa's argument is legitimate, and I believe that it will be certainly
understood."
Residents and officials charge that the Japanese
government's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism illegally
intervened in Onaga's order earlier this year that halted preliminary work on
the base. The prefecture said that the ministry acted unlawfully when it suspended Onaga's
permit cancellation for work needed to move the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station
Futenma to its slated spot in Henoko.
The legal challenge is the latest effort to block the
continued militarization of the southern Japanese island, which has long served
as home base for more than half of the 50,000 American military service members
in Japan, as well as over two-thirds of U.S. bases in the country. In late
October, hundreds of Okinawa residents, largely elders, linked
arms and physically blocked vehicles transporting building materials
to the base.
"Don't the people of Okinawa have sovereignty?"
one protester, 70-year-old Katsuhiro Yoshida, told
Japanese paper The Asahi Shimbun at the time. "This
reminds me of the scenes of rioting against the U.S. military before Okinawa
was returned to Japan (in 1972). Now we are facing off against our own
government. It is so contemptible."
Residents have long expressed anger and frustration over the
crime and pollution they say comes along with the presence of foreign troops.
"Democracy and local self-determination in Japan are in
severe condition," Onaga, who was elected on an anti-base platform, said
Friday. "We want the rest of the world to know how the Japan-U.S. security
treaty is affecting us."
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