Thousands
protest in Japan against new state secrets bill
Thousands
of people protested in Tokyo against a bill that would see
whistleblowing civil servants jailed for up to 10 years. Activists
claim the law would help the government to cover up scandals, and
damage the country’s constitution and democracy.
RT,
22
November, 2013
A
3,000-seat outdoor theater in a park in downtown Tokyo, near the
parliament, was not enough to contain everyone who came on Thursday
to denounce government plans to considerably broaden the definition
of classified information.
For
more photos of the Tokyo protests, see RT’s
Gallery.
According
to organizers’ estimates, about 10,000 people crowded
shoulder-to-shoulder in the isles of the theater and outside of it,
holding banners that read: “Don't
take away our freedom.”
Protesters
hold placards reading "Stop Secrecy Act" during a rally
against the government's planned secrecy law in Tokyo November 21,
2013. (Reuters/Issei Kato)
The
adoption of the law, proposed by the government of Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe, would enable the authorities to put civil servants
responsible for information leaks behind
bars for up to 10 years.
This
would seriously threaten the freedom of the press, as Japanese media
would face serious problems gathering information on burning issues,
because state employees would be reluctant to share information for
fear of prosecution.
That’s
why a group of Japanese journalists gathered at the Nagatacho
District, close to the country’s parliament, to protest the
proposed bill.
Currently,
long prison terms for whistleblowers only apply to those Japanese
citizens who leak classified data that came from the US military.
“The
definition of what will be designated as secrets is not clear, and
bureaucrats will make secrets extremely arbitrarily,”
TV journalist Soichiro Tahara told Japan Daily Press.
Protesting
journalists have submitted a petition to the Cabinet Office, calling
for the bill to be scrapped.
Protesters
shout slogans during a march against the government's planned secrecy
law in Tokyo November 21, 2013. (Reuters/Issei Kato)
The
proposed law is conceived in such broad terms it allows wide
interpretation and could be used for many purposes, for example such
as hiding information about the situation at the crippled
Fukushima nuclear power plant.
The
bill could be adopted as soon as next week, because the ruling
Liberal Democrat Party has a majority in both houses of the Japanese
parliament.
“If
this law comes to pass, our constitution is nothing more than a scrap
of paper,”
Reuters reported Yasunari Fujimoto, an activist with the Peace Forum
NGO, as saying. "Without
the right to know, democracy cannot exist.”
Many
Japanese have been suspicious of the legislation, since it reminds
them of the tough military secrecy laws that existed before World War
II, when Japan’s hardline militarist government was engaged on an
expansionist policy throughout Asia, until its defeat in 1945.
Protesters
shout slogans during a march against the government's planned secrecy
law, in Tokyo November 21, 2013. (Reuters/Issei Kato)
PM
Shinzo Abe says that the new legislature is extremely important to
secure cooperation with Japan’s major ally, the US, as well as
other countries.
The
data security bill resembles laws targeting whistleblowers in the US,
and Abe is also considering setting up an American-style National
Security Council, too, Reuters reports.
The
protesters do not support Abe’s eagerness to copy repressive
foreign laws.
“We
have a right to know everything,”
said Akio Hirose, a 54-year-old transport worker, adding that the
proposed law is “absolutely
unacceptable.”
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