© AFP Photo
An estimated 35,000 protesters raise placards saying “Do not yield to
authority” during a rally to protest against a controversial US airbase
in Naha in Japan’s southern island of Okinawa on May 17, 2015
Thousands of people rallied in Okinawa in southern Japan
on Sunday in protest against a controversial US airbase on the island,
as a two-decade-old bitter row over the relocation of the site drags on.
Okinawa is home to more than half of the 47,000 US service
personnel stationed in Japan as part of a defence alliance, a
proportion many islanders say is too high.
Futenma airbase has become emblematic of that ill-will
since Washington announced plans to move it in 1996, hoping to ease
tensions with the host community after the gang-rape of a schoolgirl by
servicemen.
But locals have blocked the move to relocate the base,
insisting the facility should go off-island instead, queering relations
between Tokyo and Okinawa — a once independent kingdom that was annexed
by Japan in the 19th century.
“The government says we are to blame that the issue has
stalled for 19 years and they tell us to find an alternative place (for
the base relocation). That’s outrageous,” shouted the anti-US base
mayor of Nago, Susumu Inamine.
“The government is thrusting their responsibility on us,” Inamine told a packed 15,000-seat baseball stadium.
© AFP Photo
Okinawa governor Takeshi Onaga delivers a speech at a rally in Naha
to protest against a controversial US airbase on the southern Japanese
island of Okinawa on May 17, 2015
Organisers estimated that about 35,000 people also turned up for a rally in Naha, Okinawa’s capital.
Deadlock has deepened recently after preparatory building
work on the coast begun in the face of vehement opposition from the
local government in Okinawa.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe last month insisted the current
re-location plan was “the only solution,” while anti-base Okinawa
governor Takeshi Onaga hit back saying that three recent popular votes
in Okinawa all showed overwhelming opposition to the move.
“The current government is pushing the plan. Is it
really a democratic country?” said protester Kiku Nakayama, 86, who as a
teenager worked as a nurse for soldiers towards the end of World War
II.
“We have to remove the risks of exposing Okinawa to war again,” she said.
While most Japanese value the protection the US
alliance gives them, especially in the context of Beijing’s growing
regional assertiveness, a sizable proportion of Okinawans want a dramatic reduction in their numbers.
Source: Agence France-Presse