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Sunday, April 11, 2010

RUSSIA: Russia cast as nuclear security leader despite flaws

Sunday, April 11, 2010; 6:16 PM

By Steve Gutterman, Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The nuclear security summit starting on Monday is a chance for Russia to promote itself as a global leader on the crucial issue, but experts say Moscow must do more to safeguard its own big stocks of bomb ingredients.

Almost two decades after the Soviet collapse spawned nightmares about the seizure of nuclear materials from poorly guarded facilities or theft by desperate employees, Russia says its nuclear materials are reliably protected.

It has recast itself as a champion of nuclear security worldwide, initiating an international treaty against nuclear terrorism that came into force in 2007 and joining the United States in creating a global grouping to set strategies.

Following last week's signing of a nuclear arms reduction treaty with President Barack Obama, the summit gives Russian President Dmitry Medvedev another chance to portray his country as a linchpin of international security.

"Russia wants to be seen as a leader, with the U.S. and other countries, of the global effort to prevent nuclear terrorism," said Matthew Bunn, a nuclear expert at Harvard University. "And they are a leader, in important ways."

But despite dramatic improvements in the protection of Russia's nuclear materials, funded in large part by billions of dollars in U.S. assistance, experts say threats remain.

"To say this problem was left behind in the 1990s would be wrong," said Vladimir Chuprov, Greenpeace Russia's energy projects chief. "Russia remains a risk zone in terms of the physical security and physical protection of nuclear materials."

The most glaring gaps have been fixed, vastly reducing the chances of a break-in at one of the 235 buildings across Russia where highly enriched uranium or plutonium separated from spent fuel are kept. There are also more than 100 weapons-related sites, including temporary areas such as rail transfer buildings.

INSIDER THEFT

"You don't have gaping holes in fences anymore," Bunn said, or "no detector at all to set off an alarm if someone is carrying plutonium out in their suitcase."

But the potential for theft by insiders -- who have been involved in all explained thefts of highly enriched uranium or plutonium -- is still a concern, particularly in a country where corruption is widespread.

Imperfect accounting for nuclear materials is a related weakness, he said, and some materials are protected with "wax or lead seals that are pretty much the same technology Louis XIV was using to seal his letters."

Many sites are guarded by inexperienced and poorly paid Interior Ministry conscripts, and official complacency is also a potential problem.

"One key question is whether the Russian government will really assign the resources needed to sustain the security measures that have been put in place for the long haul," Bunn said.

Like the 'New START' treaty Medvedev and Obama signed on Thursday, joint efforts to improve nuclear security showcase cooperation between the Cold War foes in tackling the threatening legacy of their nuclear arms race.

Iran's defiant nuclear program is not a focus of the summit but will likely be discussed on the sidelines. Russia has signaled it could support new sanctions against Tehran but would not back measures it considers misdirected or overly harsh.

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

View Reuters Article on the Washington Post

JAPAN: Cherry blossoms teach us the value of life

Students have a party under cherry trees.

Students have a party under cherry trees.

April 12, 2010

(Mainichi Japan)

The Japanese are famously fond of cherry blossoms, and this writer is no exception. The Japanese people would somewhat obligingly advise a foreigner that the best time to visit Japan is "at the time of the cherry blossoms." They certainly have a point, to the best of my judgment.

Every year, from the end of March to the beginning of April, even the otherwise reserved and quiet go out into the parks, and have a beer and sake drinking spree with their friends, families and colleagues, under the blossoming cherry trees. The ritual of "hanami" (literally, "flower admiration") has taken firm root in the Japanese psyche, and only the very obstinate can escape the allure of the merry-making.

Children under cherry trees on their first day at primary school.

Children under cherry trees on their first day at primary school.

The timing in the year is perfect. The overwhelming majority of Japanese schools begin the academic year in April. The sight of new pupils entering school for the first time under the bloom of cherries is a favorite national image. New recruits start working in April, too. For many people, therefore, the time of hanami coincides with another turn of the page in the great book of life, and conjures up emotions deep and subtle, not necessarily incurred solely through the disinhibiting effects of consuming alcohol.

The blooming of cherry blossoms also signifies the end of winter and the beginning of warmer weather. The new prospects in life, and the feeling that various wondrous forms of life are going to emerge in the coming months, produce a cocktail of sentiments that can only be dispelled by having an open-air party under the famous national flower, many of my compatriots would feel.

Before the reader makes the premature and hasty judgment that hanami is only a pretext for drinking (which it certainly is!), its cultural significance must be stressed. In Japan, the cherry blossoms are appreciated not only for their good looks but also for their metaphorical value. The Japanese culture traditionally took the essence of being to reside in the transition, rather than the permanence, of existence.

Cherry blossoms come to full bloom within a relatively short period and then start to perish. The very transience of the beauty of cherry flowers has always been a source of inspiration to the people of Japan, giving birth to waka poems, stories, drawings and paintings, and recently, a series of popular songs loved by younger generations.

Cherry pink in vivid contrast with green of new foliage.

Cherry pink in vivid contrast with green of new foliage.

The hanami festivities, although they are certainly occasions for celebrating life, can also remind us of our own mortality. To observe the cherry blossoms displaying their peak beauty and then fading away is a great lesson on the powers of the procession of time, which nobody among us can resist. The hidden agenda of the hanami festivities, therefore, is "memento mori" ("remember death" in Latin).

Kajii Motojiro, a Japanese writer famous for short novels of poetic prose, once wrote that "a dead body is buried under the cherry tree in full bloom."

So that time of the year comes again. The cherry blossoms are here to teach us the value of life. Enjoy the time as it passes, and embrace your precious lives. Have a cup of sake, and share the joys with your loved ones. (Story and photos by Kenichiro Mogi)

The author at Kiyomizudera temple in Kyoto at cherry blossom time

The author at Kiyomizudera temple in Kyoto at cherry blossom time

Author's profile:

Kenichiro Mogi, born in Tokyo in 1962, is a neurologist now working as a senior researcher at Sony Computer Science Laboratories and as a cooperating professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology graduate school. He also appears regularly on television and radio to discuss the workings of the human brain.

View Mainichi Article...

RUSSIA: Russia blamed for fueling unrest in Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan's deposed president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, left, looks on as supporters deliver speeches in the courtyard of his family home.

Kyrgyzstan's deposed president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, left, looks on as supporters deliver speeches in the courtyard of his family home. (Sergei Grits/associated Press)


Monday, April 12, 2010; A01

By Philip P. Pan

BISHKEK, KYRGYZSTAN -- Less than a month before the violent protests that toppled the government of Kyrgyzstan last week, Russian television stations broadcast scathing reports portraying President Kurmanbek Bakiyev as a repugnant dictator whose family was stealing billions of dollars from this impoverished nation.

The media campaign, along with punishing economic measures adopted by the Kremlin, played a critical role in fanning public anger against Bakiyev and bringing people into the streets for the demonstrations that forced him to flee the capital Wednesday, according to protest leaders, local journalists and analysts.

"Even without Russia, this would have happened sooner or later, but . . . I think the Russian factor was decisive," said Omurbek Tekebayev, a former opposition leader who is now the No. 2 figure in the government.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has denied that Moscow played any role in the uprising, and leaders of the movement to oust Bakiyev insist they received only moral support. But the Kremlin had made no secret of its growing displeasure with Bakiyev, and over the past few months it steadily ratcheted up the pressure on his government while reaching out to the opposition.

The strategy was a sharp departure from Russia's traditional support for autocratic leaders in its neighborhood. It paid off quickly and dramatically, and it appears to have delivered the Kremlin a rare foreign policy victory.

Not only has Moscow served notice on other wayward autocrats in its back yard -- many of whom also govern Russian-speaking populations that watch Russian television -- it also appears to have gained a greater say over the future of the U.S. air base here, which is critical to supplying the NATO military surge in Afghanistan.

Little more than a year ago, the Kremlin regarded Bakiyev as an ally, promising him more than $2 billion in aid during a visit to Moscow at the height of the global economic crisis.

On the same trip, Bakiyev announced plans to close the U.S. air base, in what was widely seen as an exchange.

Four months later, after Russia had made good on $415 million of its pledge, Bakiyev suddenly agreed to keep the air base open when Washington offered more than three times the original rent. Russian officials, including President Dmitry Medvedev, indicated at the time that they had blessed the decision, but it soon became clear that the Kremlin had been cheated -- and was furious.

"The Russians were upset and angry, not just because of the base but because of his attitude," Tekebayav said.

In November, Russian media reported that Putin upbraided the Kyrgyz prime minister at a summit, asking why the U.S. air base had not been closed and alleging that the Russian aid money had been stolen by Bakiyev's family. In February, Moscow postponed payment of the remaining $1.7 billion of the package, with officials saying publicly that the first tranche had been misused.

In late March, two weeks before the April 7 protests, Russia's Kremlin-friendly television stations and newspapers marked the fifth anniversary of Bakiyev's rise to power in the putsch known as the Tulip Revolution with unusually tough stories about his rule. One paper compared him to Genghis Khan, and Russia's top television station hammered him with multiple reports alleging corruption.

Much of the coverage focused on Bakiyev's son, Maksim, whom he appointed to lead an economic development agency and who had become a lightning rod for opposition charges of nepotism and embezzlement.

In addition to the reversal on the U.S. base, analysts said, the Kremlin turned against Bakiyev because he tried to bring China into a Russian deal to build a hydroelectric dam and to extract rent from Moscow for a Russian air base in Kyrgyzstan. Russian leaders were also upset that Bakiyev's family was buying gasoline from Russia at special prices and selling it to the air base, a scheme worth as much as $80 million per year, Russian media reported.

Alexander Knyazev, a political analyst here with ties to a Moscow think tank, said people began to worry that the Kremlin might expel the estimated 1 million Kyrgyz migrants who work in Russia and send money home to their families. The remittances account for as much as a third of the Kyrgyz economy and at least half of the government's budget, he said.

"Bakiyev was spoiling the relationship, and people saw it," he said. "That's how this protest mood got started."

After the opposition announced plans for nationwide protests, Putin provided a final spark by signing a decree March 29 eliminating subsidies on gasoline exports to Kyrgyzstan and other former Soviet republics that had not joined a new customs union.

When the tariffs kicked in April 1, Russian fuel shipments to Kyrgyzstan were suspended, said Bazarbai Mambetov, president of a Kyrgyz oil traders association. Within days, gas prices in Bishkek began to climb, enraging residents already angry about sharp increases in utility fees.

As the Kremlin leaned on Bakiyev, it also consulted the opposition, hosting its leaders on visits to Moscow, including in the days before the protests. On the eve of the demonstrations, the Kyrgyz prime minister accused one, Temir Sariev, of telling police that he had met with Putin and had won his support for efforts to overthrow Bakiyev.

Sariev, now the interim finance minister, said he never met Putin or told police any such thing. "But I did meet privately with friends," he acknowledged with a smile. "We did discuss the situation in Kyrgyzstan."

Tekebayev, second in command of the interim administration, said Russia's actions were important because they signaled to government officials that Bakiyev could not stay in office, undermining his support in key ministries and regions when the opposition seized control.

"The Russians used to work only with those in power in the former Soviet Union," he added. "But in the last year, they started developing relations with the opposition, like the Americans and Europeans. I think, for the first time, this approach was a success for them."

View Washington Post Article...

JAPAN: Fake hospital visits, gangsters and legal action - Fujitsu in an 'un-Japanese' mess

April 12, 2010

Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent

An acrimonious spat in the boardroom of Fujitsu has plunged one of Japan’s most revered companies into an innuendo-laden pantomime of manipulative powerbrokers, fake hospital visits, lawsuits and alleged associations with yakuza gangsters.

The next few days could prove to be even more spectacular. Within the next 24 hours Fujitsu, one of the world’s biggest technology companies, is planning to hold a press conference to face questions over whether it cajoled its president, Kuniaki Nozoe, to resign under false pretenses and then concocted a story about the state of his health to deceive the stock market.

Lawyers for a fund based in London and Japan, which claims that its reputation and business has been savaged by allegations of links to organised crime arising from Mr Nozoe’s resignation, told The Times that they were planning to sue three individual Fujitsu board members for damages this week.

That legal action would ride in tandem with a shareholder lawsuit planned by Mr Nozoe against two of those three executives and claiming that their alleged conspiracy to have him removed from power cost the company 5 billion yen (£35 million) in failed business transactions.

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Lurking in the background is the unprecedented behaviour of Mr Nozoe since his resignation last September: he has not retreated quietly to the usual Japanese corporate pastures of golf and sinecure board memberships.

Instead he has started a campaign to prevent “an abnormal situation in which I was forced to resign behind closed doors, for fabricated reasons” from happening again.

His lawyers admit that the very public imbroglio has been exceptionally “un-Japanese” — a sign, some observers suggest, that the old conventions and eccentricities of corporate Japan are being rattled to destruction.

The circumstances of Mr Nozoe’s resignation are riddled with inconsistencies and wildly differing accounts. Fujitsu, which has issued statements on the matter but held no press conference, has performed at least one significant U-turn — effectively admitting in early March that it lied in its original statement to the market about Mr Nozoe’s non-existent illness, drawing a rebuke from the Tokyo Stock Exchange authorities.

The real reason for the resignation, Fujitsu now maintains, was that in February last year Mr Nozoe was pursuing a project which involved a third-party company that “was said to have an unfavourable reputation”.

Mr Nozoe’s version of events, as described by his lawyer, contends that after holding the post of president for less than two years he was pushed out by forces unhappy with the pace and vigour with which he was reforming Fujitsu. Specifically, his lawyers point to the resistance of Naoyuki Akikusa, a board member for 22 years and a recognised kingmaker within the company.

Last September, while preparing for a board meeting less than an hour away, Mr Nozoe was called into a windowless room in the company's Tokyo headquarters. According to his version of events he was told by a delegation from that board that one of his acquaintances — a former Credit Suisse banker who had worked with numerous Fujitsu executives and now ran a small investment group called Sandringham Private Value — had links with “antisocial forces”. Knowing that the phrase was a common Japanese euphemism for the yakuza, and assuming that this information had come from the police, Mr Nozoe felt he had no choice but to resign immediately.

Mr Nozoe claims that this was the first time he had heard the allegation of yakuza connections: Fujitsu says that he was warned about the “inappropriate” acquaintance several months before the showdown.

Even as he was being forced out, say his lawyers, Mr Nozoe believed that he would still have a significant and well-paid role at the company. To secure this he even played along with Fujitsu’s public explanation for the resignation and made highly visible visits to hospital.

“When he got to the hospital he never saw a doctor, because he was in good health,” said his lawyer, Kei Hata. “He had a slightly stiff shoulder and did have some acupuncture.”

Lawyers for Sandringham strongly reject the allegations that any of their executives have links to organised crime and are make preparations for a lawsuit that would hand Fujitsu the burden of proving where the idea came from. Fujitsu has so far provided no hard evidence of any connection, insisting to Mr Nozoe merely that it was “generally known” that his acquaintance had those suspect links.

Having learnt how strongly Sandringham felt able to fight its corner, Mr Nozoe was fortified in his resolve to take on his tormentors on the board. Three weeks ago he filed a petition in Yokohama to be reinstated to his old position: last week his lawyers withdrew that after declaring that the evidence Fujitsu had presented was “incomprehensible”.

View Times Online Article...

THE KOREAS: N. Korea warns South on leaflets

(AP)

SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea's military warned South Koreans on Saturday to stop floating leaflets over the border that criticize the isolated regime, threatening decisive action if the propaganda continues.

The military also maintained in a message to Seoul's military that South Koreans who cross the border into the North for joint projects were waging a psychological campaign to discredit Pyongyang.

The two Koreas agreed in 2004 to end decades of propaganda - carried in radio broadcasts or leaflets sent over their militarized border or blared on loudspeakers - as part of reconciliation on the divided peninsula.

But activists and some North Korean defectors in the South still send balloons into the North with messages condemning North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and his communist regime. - AP

SEOUL, S. KOREA: Ex-PM Han Lags Behind Incumbent Seoul Mayor

By Lee Tae-hoon
Staff Reporter


Seoul residents still favor incumbent Mayor Oh Se-hoon, despite the court's acquittal of his archrival, former Prime Minister Han Myeong-sook, on bribery charges, Friday, a poll said Sunday.


About 38.1 percent of respondents picked Oh as the best person for mayor of the capital, followed by Han with 21.9 percent, according to the telephone survey conducted by polling agency Millward Brown, Saturday.


The survey of 600 adults residing in Seoul was carried out at the request of the Hankook Ilbo, a sister paper of The Korea Times.
Won Hee-ryong, a three-term lawmaker of the governing Grand National Party (GNP), placed third with 4 percent, followed by Roh Hoi-chan, a former lawmaker who co-chairs the New Progressive Party (NPP) with 3.8 percent and Na Kyung-won, a two-term GNP lawmaker with 3.7 percent.


Kim Sung-soon, the first legislator to declare a bid for the coveted position from the main opposition Democratic Party (DP) had only one percent of the support.


Some 27 percent either declined to comment or had no preferred candidate.


In a separate survey of 600 residents in Gyeonggi Province, incumbent Governor Kim Moon-soo of the GNP enjoyed a 43.5-percent support rate.


Ryu Shi-min, former health and welfare minister, trailed behind Kim with 14.9 percent, while Rep. Kim Jin-pyo, a member of the DP's decision-making Supreme Council, had a 9.4 percent popularity rate, according to the survey.


In a mock election among the most popular candidates for Seoul mayor, incumbent Mayor Oh of the GNP comfortably took the lead with 52.1 percent of the votes, followed by Han of the DP with 27.4 percent and Roh of the NPP with 6.9 percent.


In another mock election that replaced Oh with Won, Han placed first with 35.6 percent, followed by Won with 27.8 percent and Roh with 10.8 percent.


When Oh was replaced by Na, Han led the race with 36.2 percent, followed by Na with 31.7 percent and Roh with 10.5 percent.
Earlier, observers forecast that if Han were to be found innocent, it would deal a heavy blow to the ruling camp, helping her cruise to an easy victory in the Seoul mayoral race in the upcoming June 2 local elections.


However, the poll found that the court's ruling may not grant a certain victory to Han as the nation's attention has been diverted by the sinking of the naval ship Cheonan and the prosecution has already opened investigations against her over another bribery scandal.


Prosecutors suspect that Han may have received political funds of 900 million won ($806,500) from a construction company in 2007.

View Korea Times Article

JAPAN: Japan's Stumbling Revolution

By Karel van Wolferen

Seven months after the Democratic Party of Japan’s triumph in the national elections of 30 August 2009, Hatoyama Ichiro’s government is meeting with so much trouble that rumours have begun to circulate that it is doomed.

For two decades, since he wrote his classic (and best-selling) The Enigma of Japanese Power (1989), seasoned political commentator, Karel van Wolferen, has been thinking and writing about the problem of political power, the Japanese state’s absent “centre.” Here he offers his reflections on the current crisis, the controversial Democratic Party (Minshuto) Secretary-General, Ozawa Ichiro, and the role of the Prosecutor’s Office. Van Wolferen’s outspoken defense of Ozawa (“one of the most formidable political figures in the world today”, superior to President Obama in his “political skills and understanding of the dynamics of power”), his critical attention to what he sees as the failure of the Japanese media, and his warnings of the possible consequences of a failure and/or collapse of the Hatoyama government, merit careful reading.

This analysis was written for the monthly Chuo Koron, where it appears in Japanese in the March 2010 issue. The Asia-Pacific Journal is grateful to the author for his permission to publish it here in English. (GMcC)

The next couple of years will be crucial for the realization of genuine Japanese democracy. More than that. If the Minshuto leaders succeed in carrying out their aim of creating a cabinet-centered government this will be a grand example for others – one of the very few positive turns of fate in the political life of our planet. But the obstacles to achieving this are formidable. Not only domestic forces but also Washington will seek to torpedo the plans for a truly independent Japan that can stand on its own feet in the world. Understanding those obstacles well could help Japanese citizens contribute to the chances for a good outcome.

If a few years ago we had heard that in a world of more war, increasing economic misery and political dysfunction in many places, it would be Japan, of all countries, serving up a shining example of political improvement, most people, including me, would not have believed it. Then something very big happened. For the first time a credible opposition party took over the reins of the official government and said we want to be a true government; a political steering wheel. What happened was bigger, I think, than is yet realized today by most Japanese.

Put it in the context of recent history. After a brilliant three decades of economic achievement following World War II, Japan seemed to have lost a clear purpose, was stagnating, and had stopped giving its people a sense that their lives were improving. Something important was lacking in the political system, something that would allow it to plot an alternative, more promising, course. In 1993 reformist-minded politicians who understood the difference between administrative and political decision-making were given a short time to create a political center to the Japanese system, but they were too few and had almost no administrative backing. On the positive side, however, they discovered each other and could eventually form the credible opposition party that has now taken over.

A new consciousness had spread through the public in 1993. Drastic changes were not only desirable but also possible. It became common for prominent political figures, commentators and businessmen, to reiterate in their speeches and writing the desirability of fundamental political reform. Such a promise seemed to come close to fulfillment with the surprise election of Koizumi as president of the Jiminto (LDP). But he, the first celebrity and TV star prime minister of Japan, turned out to be only a fake reformer, thus proving the point that the Jiminto with all its encrusted relationships and habits would have to be shoved aside for attempting a truly new beginning in Japanese politics.

That opportunity finally arrived with the great majority that Minshuto managed to gain in the elections of last August. And the top Minshuto figures, who – proof that they are serious – had stuck together since 1993, lost no time in making clear that they intended to inaugurate a new era.

What Minshuto’s intentions to establish a genuine government entail is not easily understood by people who are not fully aware of the way in which Japanese political institutions developed in the Meiji Period. The question of what policies its politicians espouse is less relevant than the fact that they wish to create a policy making center; which means a center of political accountability. Special measures for crippling elected politicians had purposely been built into the system.

What Minshuto must try to do is nothing less than to break with the tradition of governance established by the founder of Japan’s bureaucracy (as well as the military), Yamagata Aritomo. Yamagata did not want the purity of a supposedly harmonious Japanese nation, grouped around an innately benevolent emperor, to be spoiled by contentious politicians. A political system run by them could not be harmonious because they had to fight each other to get elected. Yamagata introduced arrangements to make sure that they never could have the power they were officially supposed to exercise. He should, along with Bismarck, Lenin and Theodore Roosevelt, be ranked among the greatest figures who shaped the geopolitics of our planet just over a century ago. His measures allowed a political system to evolve in which military bureaucrats would eventually hijack the country in the 1930s for ill-considered purposes. His legacy endured in the odd Japanese relationship between career officials (bureaucrats) and elected officials (Diet members).

DPJ assault on the Yamagata Edifice

Siegfried Woldhek 2009

(other Woldhek cartoons)

To call the task that Minshuto has taken upon itself a heavy one is very, very, understated. It has simply not been tried before. There are no models from Japanese experience to follow. Almost everywhere Minshuto ministers will turn to re-examine policies, they will meet with partial, and sometimes heavy, opposition; not from the public that elected them, but from entrenched interests embedded in the old non-democratic establishment that they want to overcome. While the basic institutions for democracy, like parliament, the cabinet, and so on, were established in the Meiji Period, they were not used in line with their original purpose, and the many lesser institutions that allow politician-directed governance to function must now be built almost from scratch, giving many impatient observers the impression that Minshuto coalition ministers cannot make it work. Bureaucrats in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as Defense, for example, are doing their best to beguile the new politicians to stick to the conventional ways of their ministries, which has already resulted in a tragically missed opportunity for a major move forward in relations with Moscow. Bureaucrats and politicians in this case missed the significance of remarks by President Dmitry Medvedev made in Singapore in November, indicating willingness to re-open the stagnated diplomacy concerning Japanese claims to the Northern Islands. The Prime Minister’s Office is not functioning at all as it should for propagating Minshuto’s main messages for the same reason of bureaucratic conventionalism and, worse, policy subversion. What is expected from Minshuto would be daunting under the best circumstances. But current circumstances resulting from ingrained habits are dismal.

A political system that has survived for a long time is not something one can easily change, as it has developed strong defense mechanisms. When after a year’s absence from Japan (the longest time away since 1962), I returned a year ago, Japanese friends were enthusiastic about how after the summer elections things would change dramatically, with Ozawa becoming prime minister. I asked them: “what about the scandal that will aim to bring Ozawa down?” It was entirely predictable.

Minshuto Secretary-General Ozawa

Why? Because the Japanese bureaucratic system does not only have ancient built-in defenses, it has something akin to an immune system. We need to take a step back to see this in perspective. All countries have a concrete power system that is different from their theoretical one. All countries live with political honne and tatemae. The substantial system of power exists, as it were, inside the official political system that is described and regulated by such things as the constitution. The informal, unofficial, substantial system of power relations may change and drift farther away from what it should be in principle. The past decade of American political history provides a perfect example of that: power arrangements centered on the military-industrial complex and huge financial and insurance firms are stronger than the causes the American electorate has voted for. There is nothing in the American constitution that guarantees them such a position. The Japanese case is, by comparison, particularly interesting. The outlines of its informal structure have remained virtually unchanged over the post-World-War-II decades, as they have survived changes in the law or appeals to the constitution. While in the United States new laws, like those pertaining to health insurance and earlier ones regulating banking practices promote the development of informal American corporatism, an important aspect of the unofficial Japanese system is that its crucial political transactions and relationships are simply beyond the purview of the law. The Japanese unofficial political system is blatantly extralegal.

All unofficial systems of political (and of course economic) power must have ways to protect them against forces that could bend them out of shape. And the law helps with that in most cases. But not in Japan, unless it concerns heavy criminal conduct. This means that the informal but substantial Japanese System is vulnerable to excess. It has been quite all-right for Japanese business to pay for the election of Japanese politicians (as in numerous other countries), but if one politician gets so much that he achieves a kind of power that threatens the balance inside the system, action must be taken. Hence the Tanaka Kakuei scandals. Entrepreneurism is fine, but if one entrepreneur becomes so successful that he threatens unofficial social and labor arrangements, like Ezoe Hiromasa who with Recruit was actually helping to create a labor market for sarariman, he must be stopped [1]. If another entrepreneur is breaking unwritten rules of the unofficial system with financial dealings, and pokes fun at the established figures to boot, we get a Horiemon case [2]. After making a study of famous Japanese scandals, I wrote an article for Chuo Koron nineteen years ago, in which I concluded that the Japanese System had an immune system against excesses of otherwise permissible conduct, and that this immune system consists of the Japanese public prosecutor working in tandem with the Japanese media. At that time the headlines were taken up for months by a huge security brokerage scandal, involving compensation for stock market loss. This was an exquisite example of what I was analyzing because the supposedly guilty financial firms had actually been operating under the informal instructions of Ministry of Finance bureaucrats. But the result had been a threat to the Japanese financial system as a whole. What followed were the ritualistic apologies demanded from a political culture that assumes those rituals help restore harmony.

Reformist politicians constitute an open invitation for the prosecutor-media team to develop hawk eyes and find a minor case, or an imagined case, of wrongdoing. Remember when Kan Naoto was Japan’s most popular politician because he had demanded that the officials in his ministry told the truth in connection with HIV infected blood products? Within a couple of years an invented scandal to undermine his prestige had to follow. Because, make no mistake, democratic procedure may have placed them where they are, but the official representatives of the Japanese voter are a potential threat against the smooth operation of the informal system. Now, the Minshuto government is about the biggest threat to the unofficial power system it has experienced in living memory. A greater threat than a program to bring the actual power system closer to what it is supposed to be, is hard to imagine. So, right after Hatoyama became prime minister, the prosecutor-media team got into action to whip up a scandal designed to undermine his position.

Change of Government = Change of Japan

Minshuto

Let us think some positive thoughts concerning the Japanese public prosecutor. Japan’s crime rate is relatively low, and the authorities are not filling Japanese prisons to the brim, as is the case in some other countries. The public prosecutors deserve praise for the way in which they keep the penal system geared more to repentance, reform, and return to society, than to punishment. There is also little doubt that the Japanese public prosecutor is genuinely concerned with maintaining social order, and that prosecutors think of themselves as entirely responsible, even as heroically brave, when they go after what they conceive of as the disturbers of the right order in society and politics. But at the moment that makes them a threat to Japanese democracy; Minshuto politicians will therefore continue to be a target for the disruptive energies of the prosecutors.

In the same way that the Japanese extralegal political system is a legacy of Yamagata Aritomo, the self-image and the concrete role played by the public prosecutor go back to another major historical figure: Hiranuma Kiichiro. He was a fanatical believer in the moral superiority of the officials supposedly carrying out ‘the Will of the Emperor’. Like Yamagata he saw himself as a guardian of the mystical, morally pure, nation depicted in kokutai ideology, which had to be preserved from the onslaught of modern political ways, like Marxism, or liberalism, or simply democratic elections. The influence of his followers after 1945 helped to prevent reforms of the Japanese judiciary, which in many respects considers itself to be placed above the law. We can interpret the activities of the public prosecutor today as hearkening back to these higher spiritual values that rise far above what politicians can make of government. The foremost Dutch Japanologist, Wim Boot, compares them to the Censorial System of ancient China.

Foreign legal specialists have long been astonished by the discretionary powers of the Japanese prosecutor. Much of their power derives from the extraordinary leeway they have in making decisions about who to target for prosecution. In lighter criminal cases they can decide whether or not to go after a culprit, and can be extremely lenient, especially if the person they have been questioning is remorseful and makes a show of repentance. This works well for ordinary people who have broken the law but do not deserve to be punished with more than a case of fright, and approaches to law enforcement in some other countries could benefit from taking these Japanese ways as an example.

If they decide on harsh treatment and want to break down suspects, however, they will use tricks and psychological pressure and lengthy pre-trial incarceration to force confessions. But for the purpose of counteracting ambitious reformist politicians the public prosecutor uses grey areas of the law, as practically applied. There exists a broad area of vagueness between what is normally admissible in actual practice and what is definitely illegal. In many countries there exists no clear line between what is permissible tax avoidance and unlawful tax evasion. In Japan, on top of interpretable tax rules, there exists a rich vague area relating to political funding rules, which is a favorite weapon for the public prosecutor. Many Japanese know how arbitrary the investigations of the public prosecutor are. But still, there is a widespread sense also among sympathizers that, for example, Ozawa should at least show ‘sincerity’ and apologize. This is in keeping with the demands of ritual that belong to the unofficial power system. In Ozawa’s case, the arena for the ritual is now the Diet itself, even among Minshuto members, and the public at large, where it is taking on grotesque proportions as the newspapers whip up what they falsely present as ‘public demands’. The rituals of apology and ‘voluntary’ resignation constitute bowing one’s head to the informal system.

Without cooperation of the media the immune system does not work, as it is not the alleged wrong-doing that floors politicians, but the public scandal that the media can get going. Prosecutors are continually leaking information to the newspapers about the cases they intend to tackle, and give journalists and editors enough warning to be present when they raid anyone’s offices. These leaks about ongoing investigations are, of course, not in keeping with a system that sticks to lawful procedures, but we have already seen that the public prosecutor operates as if above the law.

Because of the fairly homogeneous interpretation of what is happening, the strong similarity of their commentary, and the relatively great impact they have on the reading public, Japanese newspapers, more than newspapers elsewhere that I know of, create political reality as it exists in people’s minds. In that way they tend to be more a participant in, rather than monitor of, domestic power dynamics. The big newspapers can fairly easily bring an end to a sitting government. Quite a few senior editors have mindsets like senior Japanese bureaucrats, for whom the preservation of the existing order in their world must always remain an almost sacred priority.

In one of the saddest developments of our time, newspapers almost everywhere in the industrialized world are experiencing great difficulties, and because of their growing dependence on commercial interests they have ceased to be reliable monitors of political developments. While the Japanese media situation is a bit better than that, it must be considered very regrettable that at this time of momentous change in Japan’s political life the newspapers appear to be unable to rise to the occasion and become reliable chroniclers. Until now most reporting about the new government has consisted of a huge distraction of attention from what matters for the future of all Japanese, settling instead for the routine scandal mongering that serves no one.

We may blame this on ingrained habits. The reporters and editors do what they are good at doing. Japanese political reporters cut their teeth on getting the details right about the infighting among the habatsu (factions) of the Jiminto, and later the ups and downs of government coalitions. When I covered political news in Thailand after its fairly regular military coups, I used to look up my Japanese colleagues in Bangkok because they were the world’s top experts on the factionalism inside the Thai army. No surprise therefore that right after the formation of the Hatoyama government a lot of attention went to real and imagined signs of strains among the coalition partners. No surprise that the newspapers get excited about small disagreements among Minshuto ministers that drift up to the surface. Now, it was perfectly understandable that the internal bickering and open wars within the Jiminto produced prime copy (as a journalist I also followed the fine and juicy details of the Kaku-Fuku factional war), [3] because the politicians of the then so-called ruling party were, as we have seen, not producing anything that could be called policy.

Koizumi, who profited much from the national mood wanting political reform, indulged in fake reformist moves at the behest of Ministry of Finance officials, which were not properly analysed by a media apparently mesmerized by celebrity glamour. Commentators could apparently not distinguish neoliberal economic fashion from the political repair the public was waiting for. After him we had one Jiminto cabinet after another also structurally incapable of developing policy to cope with much-changed circumstances, inside Japan as well as in the world. They did not construct a political steering wheel. They could only fall back on the administrative decisions of various ministry officials. Administrative decisions, which make necessary adjustments for maintaining a course that was designed in the past, must clearly be distinguished from political decisions, which establish a new course, a fresh departure, an essential structural change. In those post-Koizumi years, the newspapers enjoyed their role in bringing down cabinets, and we had a new prime minister every year.

That development appears to have been habit-forming as well, considering the continuous speculation about whether the Hatoyama government will last or whether it should resign. Much is made of the declining popularity of the new government from 70% to somewhere around 30% according to the newspaper polls. Such figures are notoriously unreliable, as the big papers always tell the public what public opinion ought to be. And since the newspapers ask those polled what they think of a new cabinet’s policies before a cabinet has had a chance to lay them out, all Japanese administrations – except for the PR-driven one of Koizumi – experience such steep decline.

Quite a few things about the Minshuto situation seem forgotten by the press. We read indignant comments about a ‘power grab’ by Ozawa, or about Hatoyama relying on Ozawa. Of course he is. He cannot do it alone. It is because of Ozawa that Japan is getting this chance to break through the Yamagata Aritomo tradition and create a genuine government with a political steering wheel. Without Ozawa there would not have been the party political upheaval of 1993; he started it. Without him there almost certainly would not have been a credible Minshuto opposition party. Without Ozawa Minshuto would certainly not have gained its landslide victory last August, perhaps not even a majority. Ozawa is one of the most formidable political figures in the world today. No head of government in Europe can be compared to him. And Washington’s Obama does not come close in the way of political skills and an understanding of the dynamics of power. Ozawa is continually criticized for a number of things, including his autocratic manners, but few widely read columnists appear to be interested in the question as to why he is what he is. Could Minshuto become a success without him? His Minshuto colleagues, who of course are also partially influenced by the media-created political reality, must think very hard before asking such an extraordinary leader to retire. Ozawa simply has no equal among prominent politicians with regard to a combination of determination and an over-all understanding of Japan’s informal power system.

If Minshuto were to lose its cohesion caused by a loss of determination through the manner in which the informal power system captures it, we will probably witness a very undesirable development. The emergence of a two party system, as existed before World War II, appears to have become less likely. The Jiminto is breaking up. Many splinter parties are likely to compete in future elections and, without a firm Minshuto presence, form temporary and frequently changing coalitions. Bureaucratic power will increase, and create a newly stagnant situation of administrative rule, probably worse than what existed under official Jiminto governance.

Another crucial subject, a potential hindrance on the path to Minshuto’s success, does not receive the close media attention it deserves. The U.S.-Japan relationship was something that practically everyone took for granted. The problem has been that Washington has not treated Japan as a fully independent country. This situation has already been fundamentally changed by the Hatoyama cabinet. Merely by having opened the subject of inequality for discussion means that things can never be the same again. But the Obama administration is apparently not ready for a non-Jiminto government, which was made poignantly clear by the stern messages of Hillary Clinton just before the election and those of Robert Gates soon after it. The matter of moving an American Marine base in Okinawa is apparently being turned into a test case to see whether the new government understands who is boss.

Many governments, including Washington, have long wished for Japan to take a more active role on the world stage. Its economic might changed the fate of industries in the United States and Europe, but from a geopolitical point of view, and in diplomacy, it was barely visible. The rest of the world got used to what was early on labeled as an ‘economic giant but political dwarf’. And now, when the new government says that this undesirable imbalance must change, Americans can only whine about military base arrangements different from what they want.

The two cases of the public prosecutor relentlessly pursuing supposed lawbreaking by Ozawa and American insistence on Japan implementing what Washington had earlier forced the Jiminto to agree to in 2006 have something in common. They share the lack of a general sense of proportion. A stranger to Japan, just reading big newspaper headlines between December and February on a visit, would get the impression that Ozawa was trying to evade something like a murder conviction. Any financial misreporting by Ozawa’s assistants, a misdemeanor that in other democracies would be quietly investigated, does not remotely have the weight warranting the pillory of Ozawa we have just witnessed. And considering that the public prosecutor had so little to go on that he was forced to dismiss the case against Ozawa himself, we can only conclude that things have been crazily out of proportion. That such a relatively small thing could be the source of speculation about an end to the first Minshuto cabinet, and be the basis of daily front page reporting of mainly invented public opinion about the need for Ozawa to resign, like the fever chart of a hospital patient, would make strangers unacquainted with Japanese ways wonder about the sanity of political life here. I just read an editorial in one of the major newspapers that makes the point that while no evidence could be found, this does not mean that Ozawa is innocent. It is a statement that indicates a state of hysteria among some editors, giving the impression that it has become a personal vendetta for them.

In the Futenma base case we see a new American presidency entirely missing the significance of what is happening in Japan. Obama and his advisers risk undermining new possibilities for creating a stable new cooperative relationship. Over what? Over something that ought to be minuscule in their global strategic vision. We learn from this that the Obama administration does not have its act together with respect to the revamped diplomatic attitude toward the world it announced when taking over from George W. Bush. It also proves that the American military has taken over far more American foreign policy than the details that relate to the countries it occupies. But considering that almost all of the top American officials dealing with Japan are ‘alumni’ of the Pentagon, this lack of a sense of proportion, this tunnel vision, should not surprise us.

When you can upset something very big with something that in neutral eyes can only be judged to be pretty small you have extraordinary power. We need to contemplate the vagaries of power when we contemplate the story of today’s Japan. It has undergone the biggest power-shift since the 1950s, and Minshuto has already changed some things beyond a point where they can go back to what they were. But that does not mean that its power has been consolidated. Its strength will be tested again and again. An untimely departure of the Hatoyama cabinet would be very unfortunate. With the Jiminto in charge, an annual change of prime minister hardly mattered. But a return to the ‘musical chairs’ method of change would be disastrous for Japan’s political future. The consolidation of Minshuto power will, of course, require dealing with the problem of the misplaced priorities of the public prosecutor, and of journalists who feed on leaks from the prosecutor's office like mad dogs.

When Ozawa first became the target of investigations last spring, which forced him to resign as Minshuto president, foregoing the chance to become prime minister, several Diet members were quoted as saying that if the prosecutor’s office “would apply the same standards to all of us”, the Diet would be as good as empty.

To be sure, the public prosecutor theoretically would have had the power in Jiminto days of emptying, say, half the Diet. But you can imagine that this power would not last beyond the first move of such idiotic action, because everyone in Japan, including the newspapers would conclude that the public prosecutor had gone mad.

This thought experiment demonstrates an important quality of power: it is not absolute. Power is a rather elusive thing; hard to catch conceptually in a concrete way. It has no substance that relates in any way to the laws of Newtonian physics. You cannot measure it, count it, or express it in numbers. The attempts of some specialists in political science to quantify power fail miserably. Power is in essence different from influence, which can be measured. It derives its nature to a large extent through what it is in the eyes of the recipient, the person or group to which it is directed (and is in this way somewhat comparable to love). Take an example from recent history. You will remember what happened to the power of the Soviet Union just before the end of the Cold War. A huge power system existed, which was believed to be unshakeable. It had defined the nature of our post-World-War-II geopolitics. Then something relatively small triggered events that led to the collapse of the Berlin Wall. In no time in 1989 the great power emanating from Moscow that kept populations in Eastern Europe in thrall was gone. It vanished in less than a week. Why? Because it rested on the psychology of fear. Fear of Soviet tanks. And that disappeared suddenly because Gorbachev demonstrated that he had meant what he said about not using violence to stop developments.

What we have just witnessed in Japan, and will probably witness again, is a power struggle. On one side, reformist politicians eager to implement true reform of the structure of the Japanese power system, and on the other venerable career officials who believe that the established order is something sacred. But the power of these career officials will melt like ice and snow when editorial writers and television commentators warm up to the exciting political possibilities that have opened up for Japan. Being human beings interested in public affairs, as well as Japanese with at least a residual sense of patriotism, such a switch of focus ought not be too difficult for them.

With the U.S.-Japan relationship we have another very curious power relationship, whose problems could be solved in favor of Japan. The world’s two greatest industrial powers relate to each other in unique fashion; there is nothing comparable to it. Hatoyama’s critics who blame him for mishandling diplomacy vis-à-vis Washington overlook the fact that normal diplomacy is not possible in this case, because the United States does not truly recognize Japanese sovereignty – an indispensable condition for diplomacy. It has been taken as a matter of course that Japan would in the end always do what the United States wanted. The Hatoyama government must deal with unfinished post-World War II business that its Jiminto predecessors have never looked straight in the eye.

People speak automatically about the United States and Japan as allies. But, again, we have a conceptual problem here. An alliance is a relationship entered into voluntarily by two or more independent states. When this supposed alliance began Japan had no choice in the matter. During the Occupation following World War II, Washington turned Japan into a protectorate, and has since continued to treat to Japan as such – while, more recently, urging Japan to participate in American military ventures in other countries. Virtual protectorate status has certainly had some great advantages. Japan’s very rapid growth as a trading power was much facilitated by its sheltering in the American strategic and diplomatic shadow. But, most importantly for Japan’s place in the world until recently was that the main things by which a state is recognized internationally were carried out by American proxy. In other words, Japan did not need to present itself to other countries with a strong government, capable of making fundamental political decisions.

We only need to think this through to see the connection between Japan’s lack of a political steering wheel until now and its pathological dependence on the United States. I think that the foremost Minshuto politicians, and certainly Ozawa, are aware of the mutual dependence of these two factors. As long as the United States appeared to supply a substitute for genuine large-scale Japanese diplomacy and strategic arrangements, there was no urgent need for a Japanese government capable of supplying those. And as long as no formal government in Tokyo balked at Japan being treated as a protectorate Washington could afford to meet Japanese sensibilities with disdain, as it is doing now with respect to the Marines on Okinawa. It is therefore natural that by establishing a true political center the conditions that have kept this dependency relationship going are radically altered.

The problem goes deeper nowadays. A big complication is that the United States has slipped into the grip of a militant nationalism. It is hardly a secret that its designs to deal with the emerging world reality include building military encirclement for containing China. It counts on Japan to be part of that plan. Hence the importance Washington attaches to its bases on Okinawa. But why should Japan give so much space and money to help maintain an American military empire? Fear that the United States will withdraw protection from Japan comes from ingrained habits of thought that under the changed geopolitical order since 1989 can only be called naive. I am surprised that so few Japanese are apparently aware of the fact that the United States needs Japan much more than Japan needs the United States, especially considering how important Japanese support for the dollar has been. Besides, as is the case for Europe, American protection guarantees have become highly questionable.

When a completely out-of-proportion small thing upsets something quite big, this happens through its power of intimidation. The United States has power over Japan because many Japanese, including some of its publications, are intimidated. Scared that Japan will be naked; left vulnerable to hostile powers in the future. The public prosecutor has the power to help wreck the course to a better democracy because of the media connivance with its intimidation of ambitious politicians. The two have come together in a very unfortunate confluence of circumstances. At this time when all responsible members of all political parties need to pull together to ensure that Japan becomes a fully sovereign state – of, by, and for the people, and not the bureaucracy or other usurpers of legitimate power – the prosecutor's office is having one of its egocentric moments, fulfilling its need rigidly to preserve the order it has always known without ever taking a step back to consider the political health of the nation. And Japan's mass media is unwittingly (or is it deliberately?) collaborating with the American government's hope of having its own way in Okinawa in the event the present government fails, by contributing to the building frenzy of demand for Ozawa and even Hatoyama to resign (for acts or non-acts that amount to, if anything, misdemeanors). This would be a great setback for popular sovereignty in Japan.

The unofficial Japanese political system, which Japan’s new government wants to curb, has been kept going through a lot of built-in and almost automatic intimidation, which is the exercise of extralegal powers. Because of that history elected officials in Japan can easily be intimidated because they are used to it. The manner and tone and the substance of what Clinton and Gates said clearly aimed to intimidate the Japanese public. It is crucially important for the future of the Hatoyama cabinet that it not give in to such intimidation. Solving the conflict to Japan’s advantage can be accomplished by doing nothing for a while, and reiterating that fundamental discussions about the future of the relationship must come first. Nothing bad will happen to Japan if, in the absence of an important American compromise, the deadline set for May is postponed until after such serious mutual rethinking.

Coping with domestic intimidation is more difficult for the Hatoyama cabinet. Normally, the way to counter intimidation is to fight straight back – by exposing the intimidator's motives, strategy, and tactics. Politicians of a mind to criticize the Public Prosecutors Office cannot easily do so, as they risk being accused of interference. Political committees to look into ‘alleged abuse’ of public prosecutor powers are unlikely to abolish a tradition rooted in pre-World War II days. Only an independent and vigilant media can counter the office's abuse of its delegated and assumed powers. Japan's media is free. But if it is to help foster a healthier democracy in a truly sovereign state, then it must switch from its present obsession with chasing and even creating scandals, to being a responsible monitor of domestic and global politics – and otherwise learn to use its potential power more wisely. Japan’s citizens, who voted for political reform, should take a step back, take in what is happening at the moment, and urge their media to do precisely that.

Notes

[1] Ezoe Hiromasa – Founder of Recruit Co. specializing in job placement publications. A victim of mainstream press hysteria, he was forced by prosecutors to make a confession in 1988. The scandal brought down the Takeshita cabinet.

[2] Horiemon – Takafumi Horie, the very successful entrepreneur who broke unwritten rules of the business world, challenged its practices, was arrested, and in 2007 found guilty of securities fraud.

[3] Kaku-Fuku war – The grand battle between the habatsu (clique) of Tanaka Kakuei and that of Fukuda Takeo, and their respective loyalists, which virtually split the LDP during the 70s, 80s and early 90s.

Karel van Wolferen is a Dutch journalist, writer and Emeritus University Professor of Comparative Political and Economic Institutions at the University of Amsterdam.

He is the author of The Enigma of Japanese Power and of George W. Bush and the Destruction of World Order, as well as numerous books in Japanese to be found here.

His website in English is karelvanwolferen.com

See also his 2009 essay, written on the eve of the Democratic Party’s election victory, "Lifting Japan's Curse of Muddling Through," and his "Japan-U.S. Relations Prosper on Isolation."

Recommended citation: Karel van Wolferen, "Japan’s Stumbling Revolution," The Asia-Pacific Journal, 15-2-10, April 12, 2010.

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JAPAN: Mao Asada receives Guinness Book world record

Mao Asada received a Guinness Book world record for her three Vancouver Olympic triple axels.

Mao Asada received a Guinness Book world record for her three Vancouver Olympic triple axels.  (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

April 11, 11:38 AM

By Joshua Williams

In a unique addition to Mao Asada’s 2010 accomplishes, Japan’s top figure skater now has the honor of holding a Guinness Book world record.


On April 11th, at the Stars on Ice tour in Tokyo, Mao Asada was officially award the Guinness Record for the most triple axels performed by a women in one competition; she had completed three at the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Games, one in her short program and two in her free.


The Guinness record tops off her strong 2009-2010 season where she took Silver in the Olympics, won at the World Championships for the second time, as well as took first in the Four Continents tournament and Japan National Championships.


Mao Asada becomes the third Japanese figure skater to have graced the pages of the Guinness Book; the other two are Midori Ito and Miki Ando, NHK News noted. Ito was awarded a Guinness Record in 1989 for the most perfect scores in a competition, she had had received seven 6.0s from judges at the World Championships.  Ando took her Guinness Record in 2002 for being the first women to have landed a quadruple jump in competition.

Asada commented, “I’m extremely happy. I want to see the book with my name in it as soon as possible,” according to the Yomiuri.

The 2011 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records is reportedly scheduled to go on sale in September of this year.

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JAPAN: Japanese cameraman among dead in Thailand protests

Japanese TV cameraman Hiroyuki Muramoto for Reuters was killed in Thailand protests on April 10th.Japanese TV cameraman Hiroyuki Muramoto for Reuters was killed in Thailand protests on April 10th.  (AP Photo/Reuters)

A Japanese TV cameraman working for the Tokyo branch of Reuters news agency has been listed among the dead in violent clashes between anti-government protesters and national troops in Bangkok, Thailand.


Hiroyuki Muramoto, a 43-year old husband and father of two who had worked for Reuters as a cameraman for over 15 years, fell to a gunshot wound to the chest during rally violence on April 10th, the news agency reported.


Muramoto had left for Thailand on April 8th to cover the ongoing “Red Shirt” demonstrations against the current military-backed government, and was scheduled to return back on the 22nd, ANN News noted. The Associated Press stated that at least 20 people had been killed, including four soldiers, and well over 800 injured as fighting ensued.


Who, or even what side, killed Muramoto is currently unknown. One large potential clue, the fatal bullet, could not be found as it had exited through Muramoto’s back. Reuters reported that Thai soldiers had been using tear gas and guns with rubber bullets, and that the Thai government claims protesters were carrying guns and throwing gasoline bombs and grenades. Investigations in Muramoto’s death are said to be planned.


Reuters Editor-in-Chief David Schlesinger stated, “I am dreadfully saddened to have lost our colleague Hiro Muramoto in the Bangkok clashes. Journalism can be a terribly dangerous profession as those who try to tell the world the story thrust themselves in the center of the action. The entire Reuters family will mourn this tragedy."

Junpei Tachi of Reuters Public Relations Department in Tokyo echoed those words to Japanese press.


Sankei News added that Muramoto’s family, including wife, daughters and parents, along with three of Muramoto’s colleagues, are heading to Thailand, but have not given any comments to reporters yet due to the shock of their loss.

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CHINA: Reef crash ship 'to face charges'

The Great Barrier Reef

Bulk carriers regularly take short cuts through the Reef

Page last updated at 11:46 GMT, Sunday, 11 April 2010 12:46 UK

Those responsible for a Chinese ship running aground on the Great Barrier Reef and leaking oil will be prosecuted, Australian authorities say.

Transport Minister Anthony Albanese said the vessel was clearly on an unlawful route and compensation would be sought for the spill.

"We'll be throwing the book at those responsible," Mr Albanese said.

In a separate case, three men have been charged with steering their cargo ship through a restricted area of the Reef.

The men, from Vietnam and South Korea, will appear in an Australian court on Monday, accused of taking their coal carrier on an unauthorised route through one of the world's most valuable marine wildlife reserves.

It is alleged that their vessel, the MV Mimosa, was not registered with the Reef Vessel Tracking System and failed to respond to attempts by the authorities to establish contact.

If found guilty, the men could face a maximum fine of more than A$200,000 ($205,000).

Oil fear

The Chinese vessel, the Shen Nang 1, rammed into a sandbank some 70km (43 miles) off the east coast of Great Keppel Island on 4 April after straying off its permitted route.

"It is quite clear that this vessel went on a course that was unlawful," Mr Albanese told reporters after flying over the stranded ship.

"The Australian government will ensure that the full force of the law is brought to bear on those responsible," he said.

"And we will also ensure... compensation is paid with regard to the cost of cleaning up."

Salvage crews have been pumping fuel oil from the vessel, which was carrying carrying 950 tonnes of oil and about 65,000 tonnes of coal.

Inflatable booms are in place around it to contain any oil that may spill.

In the wake of these incidents, it has emerged that bulk carriers regularly take short cuts through the world heritage-listed marine park - reef "rat-runs" that cut down on voyage times and therefore save money.

The Australian government has vowed to tighten up its maritime laws in response .

The Great Barrier Reef is the world's largest reef system and extends for more than 2,500km.

Map of Queensland showing where ship is stranded

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JAPAN: New Japanese political party forms from dissidents, "Tachiagare Nippon"

A new Japanese third pole political party, Tachiagare Nippon, or "The Sunrise Party of Japan."

A new Japanese third pole political party, Tachiagare Nippon, or "The Sunrise Party of Japan."  (image: Tachiagare Nippon press release)

April 11, 7:14 AM

By Joshua Williams

A new Japanese political party named “Tachiagare Nippon” was officially announced on April 10th by six active politicians unhappy with the current top national political trends.


Tachiagare has been formed largely from dissident members of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), the long-standing political party that lead Japan until their historical defeat to the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) in the lower house elections last fall. The six founders include five Japanese Diet members – three from the lower house (Takeo Hiranuma, Kaoru Yosano, and Hiroyuki Sonoda) and two from the upper house (Takao Fujii and Yoshio Nakagawa) – as well as the Governor of Tokyo (Shintaro Ishihara).


The name Tachiagare Nippon literally translates to “Stand up, Japan” or “Rise, Japan,” but according to Sankei News the group has chosen the official English name of “The Sunrise Party of Japan.”  Along the similar themes, the group has created a party symbol that combines Mt. Fuji, the rising sun, and the ocean - things which the group says expresses the beauty of the Japanese nation.


Tachiagare states that they have taken on a three point main stance of overthrowing the DPJ, revitalizing Japan, and realigning politics. They have also stated outright that they are going to be “anti-DPJ and un-LDP.” 

Kaoru Yosano proclaimed at an April 10th press conference, “The DPJ has no political philosophy or thought. The LPD does not have the necessary fighting spirit to be the main opposition party.”


However, the new party has a couple disadvantages from the start. First is their size; while they are aiming to increase their numbers in the Japanese Diet during the next election to stop the DJP from having a simple majority, they are currently only five members strong. Winning new seats will not be an easy task, particularly with other smaller parties vying for seats as well.


Also, there is a problem of age; the founding group’s youngest member is 67 years old. The Mainichi reported that other politicians have begun making jokes about the group, calling them the “New Silver Party” or the “Twilight Party,” and questioning their ability to appeal to younger voters.


Beyond that, some question if they are really any different from the LDP.


Whether Tachiagare, or any of the other minor non-DPJ or LDP coalition political parties, will be able to create the momentum for a new wave of third party power in the Japanese national politics will not be known at least until summer, when the next set of national elections for the upper house is scheduled.

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RUSSIA: Putin returns to crash site to pay last respects to Kaczynski

 Putin returns to crash site to pay last respects to Kaczynski

Alexey Nikolsky/RIA Novosti

14:4511/04/2010

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin flew back on Sunday to the site of the Polish plane crash near Smolensk in west Russia to pay last respects to Polish President Lech Kaczynski who was killed in the incident.

The Soviet-made TU-154 carrying Kaczynski hit the top of trees as it attempted in thick fog to land at a Smolensk airport in west Russia on Saturday morning, killing all the 97 people on board the plane.

The plane was taking Kaczynski and a delegation of top Polish officials to a ceremony to pay tribute to some 20,000 Polish officers who were executed in the Katyn forest and other locations by Soviet secret police in 1940.

Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the twin brother of the late Polish president, earlier on Sunday identified the body of Lech Kaczynski.

The press secretary of the regional governor said on Sunday that the Polish president's body would be delivered to Poland today.

The bodies of the other Polish plane crash victims have been delivered to Moscow for identification.

SMOLENSK, April 11 (RIA Novosti)

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HONG KONG: Hip Cafes in a Hong Kong Noodle District

Part of the selection at Tuckshop in Tai Hang, a neighborhood in Hong Kong. Part of the selection at Tuckshop in Tai Hang, a neighborhood in Hong Kong/Veronica Zaragovia

April 11, 2010, 6:00 am

By VERONICA ZARAGOVIA

Hong Kong locals will tell you the island’s Central district is for “gweilos,” a derogatory term for non-Chinese people, and they wouldn’t be too far off. The district is home to high-end boutiques, clubs and plenty of Westerners.

But four metro stops to the east is the quiet, charming neighborhood of Tai Hang.

As recently as a few years ago, the area was best known for its auto repair shops. But now, Tai Hang (which means “Long Gutter” in Cantonese), an easy 10-minute jaunt from exit B of the Tin Hau MTR stop, is full of fruit stalls and noodle shops nestled between hip cafes owned and staffed by Hong Kongers.

Mimi Liu, manager of Tuckshop, an Asian dessert store and bakery in Tai Hang, says she hopes that as the neighborhood evolves, it stops short of becoming the next Central.

“The rent is already almost double,” Liu said, compared to when Tuckshop opened two years ago.

For now, visitors to Tai Hang don’t come to see or be seen — they come to relax before or after hitting the bustling shopping area of Causeway Bay. Here are some spots worth the sidetrack to rest your feet and grab a pick-me-up.

Tuckshop (1 Lily Street; 852-2571-1648) has bright pink awnings and brick walls, and specializes in small treats like Korean and Filipino ice cream bars.

A latte at Café Y Taberna.

A latte at Café Y Taberna.  Veronica Zaragovia

Café Y Taberna (16C King Street; 852-2577-7165) is decorated with a full wall-sized bookshelf, wooden floors and hanging lamps. It boasts a wide selection of Belgian beers, gourmet lattes with decorated milk foam; a short menu of Thai dishes is also available.

Panda (94 Tung Lo Wan Road 852-2503-5888; http://panda-japanese-curry.blogspot.com/) specializes in hearty Japanese, home-style curry dishes and attracts a mostly teenage clientele.

At Café on the Corner (4 King Street; 852-2882-7135), a jazz soundtrack is paired with a small, mostly Italian menu.

La Casa (7 King Street; 852-6163-1388) offers an oyster bar amid warm lighting and red walls.

To satisfy the sweet tooth, there’s Jam Bakery (28 Shepherd Street; 852-2805-6696; www.jambakery.com), which sells delights like chocolate crème brulée layer cake and mango napoleons; baking lessons are also available.

GuGu cafe (19 School Street; 852-2895-0019) has housemade cakes, truffles and cookies, a minimalist décor, and plenty of natural light.

If the pastel mint green walls at Mr. Sweetheart (Sun Fat Mansion, 144 Tung Lo Wan Road; 852-3175-3868) don’t draw you in, its fruit smoothies and sweet soups, like double boiled aloe with honey and ginseng, might.

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JAPAN: Once drawn to U.S. universities, more Japanese students staying home

 Sunday, April 11, 2010; A15

By Blaine Harden

TOKYO -- Takuya Otani would love an MBA from a top U.S. business school, but he won't apply. When he graduates from college in Tokyo next year, he'll pass on an American degree and attend graduate school in Japan.

"I am a grass-eater," Otani said wistfully, using an in-vogue expression for a person who avoids stress, controls risk and grazes contentedly in home pastures.

Once a voracious consumer of American higher education, Japan is becoming a nation of grass-eaters. Undergraduate enrollment in U.S. universities has fallen 52 percent since 2000; graduate enrollment has dropped 27 percent.

It is a steep, sustained and potentially harmful decline for an export-dependent nation that is losing global market share to its highly competitive Asian neighbors, whose students are stampeding into American schools.

Total enrollment from China is up 164 percent in the past decade; from India, it has jumped 190 percent. South Korea has about 76 million fewer people than Japan, but it now sends 2 1/2 times as many students to U.S. colleges.

Just one Japanese undergraduate entered Harvard's freshman class last fall. The total number of Japanese at Harvard has been falling for 15 years, while enrollment from China, South Korea and India has more than doubled.

Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust said that when she visited Japan last month, she met with students and educators who told her that Japanese young people are inward-looking, preferring the comfort of home to venturing overseas. They also told her they view the economic advantage of attending a U.S. college as questionable.

"An international degree is not as valued," Faust said she learned from her encounters here.

Looking for 'harmony'

The skepticism extends beyond students. At big Japanese companies, many bosses don't like what they see as the sometimes uppity and overly independent ways of American-educated young Japanese, said Tomoyuki Amano, chief executive of Tomorrow Inc., which publishes a magazine about foreign education.

Amano said many employers prefer the "harmony" that comes from hiring the locally educated, who they believe work longer hours, complain less and request fewer vacations.

Amano, 28, said he speaks from bitter personal experience.

After graduating six years ago with a degree in management from California State University, Chico, he returned to Tokyo and took a job with Hitachi, Japan's largest electronics manufacturer.

"I really felt that I could not question anyone who was older than me," Amano said. "I also learned that it was going to be hard to get a promotion or take a vacation. Promotions tend to go to those who attend the same Japanese schools as the bosses."

Bottom-line considerations are steering many young Japanese away from U.S. colleges, said Tadashi Yokoyama, chairman of the board of Agos Japan, a Tokyo company that prepares students to take language exams and other tests needed for admission to foreign schools.

"This is not a time in Japan for intellectual curiosity," said Yokoyama, who graduated from UCLA in the early 1980s. "You have to think about investment and return."

In the 1970s and '80s, when Japan's economy was booming, the bottom line did not matter for many young Japanese. It was fashionable, stimulating and affordable for them to travel the world, study English in foreign settings and attend college in the United States. Their parents had money, and jobs were plentiful when they came home.

The collapse of the bubble economy in the 1990s changed those calculations. And the construction inside Japan of more than 200 new universities has made it easy to find an affordable education without enduring jet lag and having to learn English.

At the same time, Japan's low birthrate is constricting college enrollment, both inside and outside the country. The number of children under the age of 15 has fallen for 28 consecutive years. The size of the nation's high school graduating class has shrunk by 35 percent in the past two decades.

"When you combine a big decrease in the student population with a big increase in the number of Japanese universities and couple that with rising tuitions in U.S. colleges, you can understand why priorities have changed," said Tokoyama.

A mixed experience

An exception to the trend: Some in corporate Japan still send promising young employees to graduate school in the United States. Eighty major companies pay Agos Japan to prep their workers for graduate schools in the United States and other countries.

When these employees return to Japan with MBAs and other advanced degrees, however, they often find that their companies don't know how to make use of their skills -- and that they are penalized for having stepped off the corporate ladder.

NTT Data, a major information technology company, sent Masaki Honda to UCLA for an MBA. But "during the two years I was gone, I was regarded as a net cost to the company," said Honda, who is now president of Agos Japan. "I lost seniority compared to my peers and my performance while I was in business school was evaluated as 'C' for mediocre."

For all the risks and frustrations of higher education in the United States, some young people remain willing to go.

Nobuko Tabata, 29, is heading off next fall to Philadelphia for the two-year MBA program at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.

"I want to know the world's highest-level people," she said. "I want to be a higher-level manager. It would be easy for me to stay in Japan, but I need more."

Tabata, a certified public accountant who works for her family's transport company, has spent $25,000 and devoted the past two years to studying English, taking tests and polishing application essays. She is married to a CPA who works for Sony, who will probably remain in Japan.

She said she is eager to be challenged and to learn the latest skills in corporate management -- and ready to sleep just three or four hours a night.

"I think I am a meat-eater." she said.

Special correspondent Akiko Yamamoto contributed to this report.

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JAPAN: Risk of Japan going bankrupt is real, say analysts

Risk of Japan going bankrupt is real, say analysts

A shopper walks past a shop advertising a sale in Tokyo. Debt problems in Greece may currently be in the spotlight but Japan is walking its own financial tightrope, analysts say, with a public debt mountain bigger than that of any other industrialised nation.(AFP/File/Yoshikazu Tsuno)

Sun Apr 11, 2:19 am ET

by Kyoko Hasegawa

TOKYO (AFP) – Greece's debt problems may currently be in the spotlight but Japan is walking its own financial tightrope, analysts say, with a public debt mountain bigger than that of any other industrialised nation.

Public debt is expected to hit 200 percent of GDP in the next year as the government tries to spend its way out of the economic doldrums despite plummeting tax revenues and soaring welfare costs for its ageing population.

Based on fiscal 2010's nominal GDP of 475 trillion yen, Japan's debt is estimated to reach around 950 trillion yen -- or roughly 7.5 million yen per person.

Japan "can't finance" its record trillion-dollar budget passed in March for the coming year as it tries to stimulate its fragile economy, said Hideo Kumano, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

"Japan's revenue is roughly 37 trillion yen and debt is 44 trillion yen in fiscal 2010, " he said. "Its debt to budget ratio is more than 50 percent."

Without issuing more government bonds, Japan "would go bankrupt by 2011", he added.

Despite crawling out of a severe year-long recession in 2009, Japan's recovery remains fragile with deflation, high public debt and weak domestic demand all concerns for policymakers.

Japan was stuck in a deflationary spiral for years after its asset price bubble burst in the early 1990s, hitting corporate earnings and prompting consumers to put off purchases in the hope of further price drops.

Its huge public debt is a legacy of massive stimulus spending during the economic "lost decade" of the 1990s, as well as a series of pump-priming packages to tackle the recession which began in 2008.

Standard & Poor's in January warned that it might cut its rating on Japanese government bonds, which could raise Japan's borrowing costs amid the faltering efforts of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's government to curb debt.

The system of Japanese government bonds being bought by institutions such as the huge Japan Post Bank has been key in enabling Japan to remain buoyant since its stock market crash of 1990.

"Japan's risk of default is low because it has a huge current account surplus, with the backing of private sector savings," to continue purchasing bonds, said Katsutoshi Inadome, bond strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

But while Japan's risk of a Greek-style debt crisis is seen as much less likely, the event of risk becoming reality would be devastating, say analysts who question how long the government can continue its dependence on issuing public debt.

"There is no problem as long as there are flows of money in the bond market," said Kumano.

"It's hard to predict when the bond market might collapse, but it would happen when the market judges that Japan's ability to finance its debt is not sustainable anymore."

"And when that happens, the yen will plummet and a capital flight from Japan's government bonds to foreign bonds will occur," he said.

Yet others argue that there is no precedent for the ratio of debt to GDP nearing 200 percent being dangerous.

Nomura Securities economist Takehide Kiuchi cited Britain's government debt in the post-war period "which reached 260 percent but (the government) didn't face a debt crisis.

"There is no answer to the question of what the critical level of debt is for a government to go bust."

The likes of single-currency Greece and non-eurozone countries are also different in that the latter group have flexible currency exchange rates which are more closely calibrated to their fiscal conditions, he said.

Instead, the most realistic hazard brought by huge Japanese debt is prolonged deflation under a shrinking economy, say analysts.

"Regaining fiscal health needs fiscal austerity, which could weigh on economic growth," said Kiuchi.

"And when the economy is bad, people don't spend money as they are worried about their future, which in turn intensifies the deflational trend," he said.

Continued deflation could further worsen Japan's fiscal health because of less tax revenue and more stimulus spending, stirring fears over big tax hikes, which in turn weigh on demand and again reinforce deflation, analysts said.

The key to breaking the vicious cycle is drafting a feasible economic growth strategy for Japan, they said.

"If the economy grows, tax revenue increases," Kumano of Dai-ichi Life said.

Since 2001 Japan's annual growth rate has peaked at 2.7 percent in 2004.

The economy shrank 1.2 percent in 2008 and 5.2 percent last year.

Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's centre-left government has pledged to announce details of its new strategy in June, which aims to lift annual growth to two percent by focusing on the environment, health, tourism and improved ties with the rest of Asia.

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