Japan
secrecy act stirs fears about press freedom, right to know
Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government is planning a state secrets
act that critics say could curtail public access to information on a
wide range of issues, including tensions with China and the Fukushima
nuclear crisis
25
October, 2013
The
new
law would dramatically expand the definition of official secrets and
journalists convicted under it could be jailed for up to five years.
Japan's
harsh state secrecy regime before and during World War Two has long
made such legislation taboo, but the new law looks certain to be
enacted since Abe's Liberal Democratic Party-led bloc has a
comfortable majority in both houses of parliament and the opposition
has been in disarray since he came to power last December.
Critics
see parallels between the new law and Abe's drive to revise Japan's
U.S.-drafted, post-war constitution to stress citizen's duties over
civil rights, part of a conservative agenda that includes a stronger
military and recasting Japan's wartime history with a less apologetic
tone.
"There
is a demand by the established political forces for greater control
over the people," said Lawrence Repeta, a law professor at Meiji
University. "This fits with the notion that the state should
have broad authority to act in secret."
Abe
says the new law, a draft of which was approved by his cabinet on
Friday and should be passed by parliament in the current session, is
vital to his plan to set up a U.S.-style National Security Council to
oversee security policies and coordinate among ministries.
Outside
Abe's official residence, several dozen protesters gathered in the
rain in a last-minute appeal against the move.
"We
are resolutely against this bill. You could be subject to punishments
just by revealing what needs to be revealed to the public," one
of the protesters said.
Legal
and media experts say the law, which would impose harsh penalties on
those who leak secrets or try to obtain them, is too broad and vague,
making it impossible to predict what would come under its umbrella.
The lack of an independent review process leaves wide latitude for
abuse, they say.
"Basically,
this bill raises the possibility that the kind of information about
which the public should be informed is kept secret eternally,"
Tadaaki Muto, a lawyer and member of a task force on the bill at the
Japan
Federation of Bar Associations, told Reuters.
"Under
the bill, the administrative branch can set the range of information
that is kept secret at its own discretion."
Media
watchdogs fear the law would seriously hobble journalists' ability to
investigate official misdeeds and blunders, including the collusion
between regulators and utilities that led to the 2011 Fukushima
nuclear disaster.
A
probe by an independent parliamentary panel found that collusion
between regulators and the nuclear
power
industry was a key factor in the failure to prevent the meltdowns at
Tokyo Electric Power Co's (Tepco) tsunami-hit Fukushima plant in
March 2011, and the government and the utility remain the focus of
criticism for their handling of the on-going crisis.
Tepco
has often been accused of concealing information about the crisis and
many details have first emerged in the press. In July, Tepco finally
admitted to massive leaks of radiation-contaminated water into the
Pacific
Ocean
after months of media reports and denials by the utility.
CHILLING
IMPACT
"This
may very well be Abe's true intention - cover-up of mistaken state
actions regarding the Fukushima disaster and/or the necessity of
nuclear
power,"
said Sophia University political science professor Koichi Nakano.
Legal
experts fear a broad impact on the media's ability to act as a
watchdog. "It seems very clear that the law would have a
chilling effect on journalism in Japan,"
said Meiji University's Repeta.
Critics
have dismissed as political window dressing the addition of
references to freedom of the press and the right to know, which were
added to the bill at the insistence of the LDP's junior coalition
partner, the New Komeito party.
The
LDP has sought unsuccessfully previously to enact such a state
secrets law but impetus was renewed after a Japanese Coast Guard
official posted video
online in 2010 showing a collision between a Chinese fishing
boat and a Japanese patrol vessel near disputed isles in the East
China
Sea. The government, then led by the now-opposition Democratic Party,
wanted to keep the video under wraps for fear of inflaming tense
Sino-Japanese relations.
The
Coast Guard official was suspended for one year, but resigned his
post. He was not indicted for any crime.
The
new legislation would create four categories of "special
secrets" that should be kept classified - defense, diplomacy,
counter-terrorism and counter-espionage.
Top
officials in all ministries - rather than only defense officials as
currently - will be able to designate state secrets for five years,
renewable in five-year increments and potentially indefinitely,
although cabinet approval would be required after 30 years.
"As
things stand, the state gets a more or less free hand in deciding
what constitutes a state secret and it can potentially keep things
secret forever," Nakano said.
Currently,
only defense secrets are subject to such classification. Security
experts say that makes defense officials reluctant to share
classified data with other ministries, a pre-requisite for the
functioning of the planned National Security Council.
Under
the new law, public servants and others cleared for access to such
information could get up to 10 years in prison for leaks. At present,
they face one year imprisonment except for defense officials, who are
subject to up to five years in prison or 10 years if the data came
from the U.S. military.
Journalists
and others in the private sector who encourage such leaks could get
up to five years in jail if they used "grossly inappropriate"
means to encourage leaks.
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