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In Japan’s Okinawa, outrage mounts over government silence on sex crimes involving US troops

  • Activists say Tokyo’s failure to liaise with the local government means victims get no help and shows ‘real contempt’ for Okinawans

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People stage a protest rally in Naha in the southern Japan island prefecture of Okinawa on July 4 following a recent spate of cases of US military personnel accused of committing sexual crimes. Photo: Kyodo

Protests have erupted across Okinawa following revelations that the Japanese government withheld information about US troops’ sexual assaults on local women, with residents expressing outrage and demanding greater accountability from Tokyo.

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There have been a series of demonstrations across the prefecture, home to around 30,000 US military personnel, and local residents have told This Week in Asia that they feel anger is reaching levels similar to those last seen in September 1995, when three US servicemen abducted and repeatedly raped an Okinawan girl aged 12.

That outrage saw hundreds of thousands taking part in protests but, two decades later, critics say they are fighting the same battles. This time, however, much of their fury is aimed at Tokyo.

“The situation is absolutely miserable,” said Shinako Oyakawa, a rights activist who is also involved in local politics in Japan’s southernmost prefecture.

“No one is standing up for us,” she said. “The Japanese government continues to expose the people of Okinawa to this sort of risk and the victims get no help.

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“They have told us for decades that the US military is here to protect us, but the opposite is true. People are furious and I hope this can be the turning point for the bases in Okinawa.”

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