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Ten
Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds
"Ten
Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.
2007
Okinawa Anti-U.S. Military HUMAN CHAIN PROTEST & "Secret Details
of Sordid Okinawan Reversion Deal Revealed"
The American mainstream media did not cover the thousands of Okinawan
people, of all ages, participating in this year's human chain protest
encircling the 11-mile periphery of Kadena Air Base, protesting the presence
of 22,000 American troops stationed there.
The vigorous protests of thousands of thinking and empowered citizens
does not conform with the American media's stereotypical view of a "homogenous"
Japanese who all think alike, live to work long hours, watch quirky television,
and who behave passively, without the threat of repressive government
tactics.
This false image depicts an authoritarian state's dream population, but
not the messy reality of Japan's which manifests all forms of diversity
– political, religious, gender, class, regional, ethnic, age...and
a history of suppression of Japanese people's multifaceted diversity,
including views that clash with the government's official party lines.
Kudos to the Japanese media which did report on the protest of nearly
16,000 Okinawans that begain with the Sunday, May 13 human chain, that
can be viewed online at this broadcast
report with an impressive helicopter view and on-site interviews.
Protests continued into the week, as part of the celebration of the 35th
anniversary of Okinawa's reincorporation into Japan (the US ruled Okinawa
from Japan's WWII defeat in 1945 until 1972). The U.S. maintains nine
bases populated with 44,590 soldiers that occupy ten percent of the Japanese
archipelago, under the Mutual Defense Pact signed with Japan. An additional
37,000 American troops are stationed in Korea.
Japan Focus'
reprint of Kyodo News' "Secret
Details of Sordid Okinawan Reversion Deal Revealed"
<>demonstrates the use of repressive media tactics in Japan in the
discrediting of former Mainichi reporter Takichi Nishiyama who uncovered
the secret deal between the U.S. and Japanese governments that defrauded
Japanese taxpayers and Okinawans whose property had been seized by the
U.S. military:
"To keep a secret pact from being exposed prior to the 1972 reversion
of Okinawa, the United States agreed to a Japanese request to delay paying
compensation to local landowners, according to recently revealed U.S.
documents.
"Under the deal, the central government agreed to shoulder the $4
million cost to restore Okinawa's land to its original state.
"In the end, the compensation actually paid to the landowners came
to less than$ 1 million, according to the documents in the U.S. National
Archives and Records Administration.
"An Okinawa reversion agreement signed in June 1971 stipulated that
the U.S. would "voluntarily" pay to convert military land into
farmland. However, Japan reportedly shouldered the cost by slipping the
$4 million into the $320 million Tokyo paid to Washington to buy U.S.
assets along with the reversion.
"According to the documents, the $320 million was to be paid in five
installments, and $4 million was to be diverted to a trust fund to be
set up from the first installment of $100 million, which was to be paid
in May 1972, so that the compensation payment could begin by the end of
1972.
"Lawmakers of the then main opposition Japan Socialist Party had
taken up the secret pact in the Diet between late March and early April
1972, based on copies of classified diplomatic documents obtained by a
Mainichi Shimbun reporter, Nishiyama Takichi.
"The government denied the existence of the
secret pact.
"A U.S. Department of Treasury document dated May 11, 1972, indicates
Japan requested the United States postpone the payment on the grounds
that setting up a trust fund would mean publicly acknowledging the existence
of the secret deal.
"The Treasury Department then decided to postpone the start of the
compensation payment until 1973 after reviewing the case along with the
departments of State and Defense, according to the documents.
"Nishiyama was arrested in April 1972, along with his news source,
a Foreign Ministry clerk, over the information leak. The development is
believed to have prompted Washington to comply with the Japanese so the
arrests could not reignite debates on the secret pact.
"The trust fund was established in 1973. Of the $4 million Japan
had provided the U.S., less than $1 million was paid to landowners in
Okinawa, and some of the $4 million went to pay expenses for the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, which was charged with the compensation payment,
according to the documents.
"Nishiyama, who was later convicted and given a suspended prison
term, said, "It is as if the United States defrauded landowners and
embezzled the money that should have been returned to Japan.
"'The United States has siphoned off (Japanese) taxpayers' money.
The Okinawa secret pact is just the tip of the iceberg,' the 75-year-old
added.
"Nishiyama failed to clear his name in March when the Tokyo District
Court rejected his damages suit against the government in which he argued
his career was ruined by an illegal conviction stemming from his scoop
of the secret pact.
"In February 2006, Yoshino Bunroku, a retired diplomat who negotiated
with Washington on Okinawa's reversion as director general of the Foreign
Ministry's then American Bureau, admitted to the existence of the secret
pact."
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