The White Peril 白禍

26 June 2008

納得できない
The families of Japanese abductees are, not surprisingly, unhappy with the Bush administration's decision to remove the DPRK from its list of terrorism-sponsoring states:

"Even though they tell us they won't forget...we can't accept this." On 26 June, when the United States government announced that it would drop North Korea from its list of states that sponsor terrorism, voices of despair and hopelessness were raised by the families of [Japanese] abductees, which had expected cooperation and effort from the US toward resolving the issue. The move also fomented mistrust toward the Japanese government, which approved of the removal: "Why didn't they take a harder line?"


The families are questioning whether the US should have changed its position based on the documents submitted. Their bitterness is understandable--those who were abducted disappeared in the late '70s and early '80s, and several are still almost entirely unaccounted for. It's hard to say what the best approach is, though. Slowly coaxing the DPRK to open up--assuming such a thing is possible--may ultimately be the only way to get access to such records of the abductees as remain.
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-26 12:03:39 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: DPRKabductions
ナイフ持った男ともみ合う
Surprise! Possible copycat-criminal-in-the-making in Japan. He was (fortunately) thwarted by the police before he could slice anyone up in Akihabara:

One of the officers suffered slight injuries when he arrested the man for obstructing officers from performing their official duties. The man, who is about 170 centimeters tall and was wearing a black jacket and navy blue jeans, remained silent during questioning.

The scene is located about 60 meters north of an intersection where a deadly stabbing rampage occurred on June 8.

At around 1:25 p.m. on Thursday, the two officers spoke to the man who was walking on a sidewalk on the Chuo Dori street in Chiyoda-ku in a bid to question him when they found a knife in his rucksack, local police said. A 31-year-old senior officer immediately took away the knife from him.

The officers put him into a police car for questioning when he suddenly grabbed his knife back from the senior officer and escaped from the vehicle. The officer chased him for about three meters and overpowered him.


A black jacket in Tokyo at 1 p.m. this time of year? Guy must be nuts.
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-26 10:55:51 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan

25 June 2008

Abductee issue still on the table
The Yomiuri prints an AP story relating that President Bush has promised not to forget the importance of the abductee issue to the Japanese:

U.S. President George W. Bush told Japan's premier Wednesday he understands Tokyo's concern about Japanese citizens kidnapped by North Korea.

Bush telephoned Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and told him that he "would not forget the abduction issue," said a statement from Japan's Foreign Ministry.

The 20-minute phone conversation came a day before North Korea is expected to provide a list of its nuclear activities, a process that could lead to taking Pyongyang off Washington's terrorism and sanctions blacklists in exchange for the regime giving up its nuclear weapons program.

North Korea's abduction of Japanese nationals in the 1970s and 80s is a high-profile issue here, and Tokyo has long pushed for the resolution of the abductions as a condition for providing aid and improved relations to the communist nation.

Japanese Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura on Tuesday suggested that Tokyo would not want Pyongyang taken off the U.S. terrorism blacklist until the abductions were resolved.

Komura is expected to voice Tokyo's concern during talks with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who is to visit Japan Thursday for a Group of Eight foreign ministers' meeting.


Japan has been frustrated with the DPRK denuclearization talks because the abductee issue is consistently back-burnered. The Bush administration has regularly expressed sympathy with the families of abductees, and, of course, kidnapping of civilians is an act of aggression. But it's not surprising that the DPRK hasn't given Japan any real satisfaction on most of them. Their records may just have disappeared or not been kept systematically in the first place, and who knows how methodically the corpses of those now dead were processed.
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-25 14:40:29 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: DPRKabductions
Slippery ones
Like crossword puzzle writers, the Japanese love their eels. They are, I believe, easy to breed, and Japan came to import a lot of them from the PRC. Of course, the product scandals of the last year have lowered the value of imports from China; the latest food labeling scandal involves trying to pass them off as more prestigious domestic products:

The fisheries ministry Wednesday issued business improvement orders to two companies that mislabeled tons of eels imported from China and pretended they came from a Japanese region famed for its eel products.

Osaka-based trader Uohide and Kobe-based seafood wholesaler Shinko Gyorui Ltd. even used the name of a fictitious manufacturer under the scheme to win higher prices for domestic eels, especially those from Isshiki, Aichi Prefecture, according to the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

According to the ministry's investigation, the two companies sold at least 390,000 eels, or 49 tons, imported from China as domestic products.

The ministry also suspended shipment of 540 tons of mislabeled eels stored at Uohide facilities and 207 tons at warehouses of Shinko Gyorui, a wholly owned subsidiary of seafood industry leader Maruha Nichiro Holdings Inc.

"A case of food mislabeling, which even uses a dummy company to sell products, is unprecedented and should be viewed as extremely malicious," a ministry official said.

*******

The average market price for a kilogram of imported kabayaki eels, or about eight eels, is between 1,800 and 1,900 yen ($17 and $18). Domestic products sell for between 4,000 yen and 5,000 yen per kg.


Setting up a shell company to disguise mislabeling may be unprecedented in Japan, but the maliciousness isn't; see the linked post below.

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. Slippery ones
  2. Mystery meat
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-25 13:44:26 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan

17 June 2008

副都心線
It would be very unkind to laugh at the difficulties the new subway line in Tokyo is experiencing:

Services on the newly opened Fukutoshin (Subcenter) Subway Line in downtown Tokyo have been disrupted for four consecutive days since its inauguration on Saturday due to technical problems and errors, its operator said.

"A series of problems were caused by workers' inexperience. We'll assign experienced workers to help out in an effort to ensure punctual operations," said a spokesman for the line's operator, Tokyo Metro Co.

At around 7:30 a.m. on Tuesday, circuit breakers at Wako and Asaka power substations in Saitama Prefecture were tripped, forcing trains to stop for 30 seconds, according to Tokyo Metro officials.

The trouble delayed trains on the Fukutoshin Line as well as the Yurakucho Line and Tobu Railway Tojo Line, which operate through trains with the trouble-plagued new line, by up to 30 minutes.


The Fukutoshin Line is of special meaning to me, since I walked between Shibuya and Shinjuku Stations via Meiji Avenue several nights a week for years. It was my constitutional. I loved looking at the cranes and earth-moving equipment in the street. I didn't always love the zig-zag temporary sidewalks necessitated by the tunnel construction, but progress requires inconvenience. Much of the hard thinking I did while deciding whether I wanted to stay in Japan took place during these walks.

The new train line probably will help to relieve congestion on the Yamanote Line. I'm not sure I agree (on this as on many other things) with Tokyo Metro Governor Shintaro Ishihara, though:

Prior to its inauguration, an opening ceremony was held at Shinjuku-Sanchome Station in Shinjuku-ku on Friday morning, attended by Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara and other officials.

"Whether an urban area can mature depends on efficient means of transportation. The new line will lead to the vitalization of Tokyo," Ishihara said in his speech.


Yes, of course, he had to say something upbeat. Still, the idea that western Tokyo, along the major artery of Meiji Avenue, needs a new train line to help it "mature," is pretty inane. People already grit their teeth and take the Yamanote Line despite its cattle-car-ish crowds or just use cabs to get from Shibuya to Shinjuku and (if they must) Ikebukuro. The new line won't be useless, but it won't solve the demographic and economic policy problems that have held back the "vitalization" of Tokyo since the Bubble burst. Makes it faster for gay guys to get from Shibuya to Shinjuku 2-chome, though!
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-17 20:58:16 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan
死刑
Japan--have I posted about this before? [rummaging] yes, actually--has a habit of executing people on death row with no warning. Even the families customarily don't find out until afterwards. Yesterday, one of the country's most infamous serial killers was executed after a decade on death row. This is from the English version:

[Tsutomu] Miyazaki kidnapped a 4-year-old girl in Iruma, Saitama Prefecture, in August 1988, murdered her in a mountain forest in Akiruno, western Tokyo, and burned her body, according to the ruling.

He also abducted a 7-year-old girl in Hanno, Saitama Prefecture, in October 1988, and murdered her in Akiruno, the court found.

He was convicted of abducting another 4-year-old girl in Kawagoe, Saitama Prefecture, in December of the same year, strangling her and abandoning her body in a forest.

He was also found guilty to abducting a 5-year-old girl in Koto-ku, Tokyo, in June the next year, murdering her and dumping her corpse. Moreover, he molested an elementary school girl in Hachioji, western Tokyo, in July of the same year, according to the ruling.

On Tuesday, Yoshio Yamasaki, 73, and Shinji Mutsuda, 37, were also executed at the Osaka Detention Center and the Tokyo Detention Center, respectively.


Part of Miyazaki's MO was to send brutally succinct notes to the families of his victims describing how they'd suffered before dying. Whether sane or insane (which is still, I believe, disputed), the man was a fiend.

I hadn't heard of the other two convicts who were executed; according to The Japan Times:

The two others hanged Tuesday were Yoshio Yamasaki, 73, and Shinji Mutsuda, 37.

Yamasaki was convicted of murdering two people in a life insurance fraud in Kagawa Prefecture in 1985.

Mutsuda was convicted of killing two people to take over a sex service shop owned by one of the victims in Tokyo in 1995.


*******

If that's not depressing enough, it's emerged that the man who rammed a crowd and then stabbed seven people fatally in Akihabara (a section of Tokyo) attacked people who had been helping his previous victims:

Among the 12 victims are at least three people who were caring for those he had earlier attacked, according to investigators. The three include a 53-year-old assistant police inspector and a 54-year-old taxi driver.

The three were attacked from behind and suffered serious stab wounds, local police said.


I haven't written much about Japan (or anything else) lately here, but the whole story is, of course, a big deal there. Images of Tomohiro Kato's cell phone website postings, which warned that he planned to kill people in Akihabara, were all over the news. With the proliferation of point systems at and competition among electronics stores, Akihabara has lost some of its allure for shoppers, but the place still crowds up on weekends. Kato perpetrated his attacks in the early afternoon of Sunday, 8 June.
Posted by Sean on 2008-06-17 20:44:57 | 1 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: japan