Japan's security laws come into effect as public protests erupt

Updated: 2016-03-29 12:24

(Xinhua)

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Japan's security laws come into effect as public protests erupt

Opposition lawmakers crowd around Masahisa Sato (2nd L), deputation chairman of the upper house special committee on security, at an upper house special committee session on security-related legislation at the parliament in Tokyo, Japan, September 17, 2015. [Photo/Agencies]


While mention has been made of the fact that Japan's forces on UN peacekeeping missions will also be able to use their weapons to come to the aid of foreign forces under attack from any armed group, such as Japanese peacekeepers currently deployed in South Sudan, as well as minesweeping mission in the Strait of Hormuz, and Japanese forces being allowed to evacuate its citizens if their lives are threatened overseas, other details pertaining to operational scope, protocols, borders, and rues of engagement remain entirely vague.

To this end, opposition parties have stated they will take issue with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party-led coalition over this, in this summer's upper house elections, and make this a central theme. Prior to that the head of the main opposition Democratic Party Katsuya Okada is calling for the law to be scrapped.

Abe's remarks to parliamentary committee on Monday did little to appease the opposition camp or the public, who are once again gearing up for nationwide protests Tuesday, centered around the Diet building in central Tokyo, with the rightwing leader stating that the new laws would serve to further cement Japan's alliance with the United States and act as a "deterrence".

The latest media polls show that more than half of Japan's population are opposed to the new war laws with even more believing they violate Japan's Constitution. Only a minority of those polled recently view them as being favorable.

As the government here continues to refuse to suitably atone for its wartime atrocities and actively sets about whitewashing its tarnished history -- most recently by insisting humanities textbooks for use in high schools represents the current rightwing administration's warped views on history and territorial issues -- those opposed to the laws are urging the public to remember that the formation of the bills were based on a "forced reinterpretation" of the Supreme Law.

"Prime Minister (Shinzo) Abe changed the interpretation of the Constitution by force. Is it OK to change the Constitution's pacifism so easily?" Katsuya Okada was quoted as saying during a public speech on Monday.

"We have to stop the 'reckless driving' of the Abe administration. This is the last chance to realize the politics in which it is possible to change ruling parties," Okada said at his newly-merged party's inaugural convention in Tokyo recently.

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