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Asylum incident fuels anti-China rhetoric in Japan
By James Conachy
27 May 2002
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After more than two weeks of diplomatic controversy between
Japan and China, five North Koreans who were dragged from the
Japanese consulate in Shenyang on May 8 were permitted by Beijing
to fly to the Philippines and on to South Korea on May 23. However,
the result of what is being termed the Shenyang incident
is an intensified political campaign by right-wing, nationalist
forces in Japan for a confrontational anti-China policy.
The basic facts of what took place on May 8 are not in dispute,
due to the existence of a video-tape of large parts of the incident.
Two North Korean men ran through the open gates of the Japanese
consulate, followed by two women with a young child. While the
men reached the visa application section of the building, the
women were stopped by Chinese police. The video clearly shows
the police dragging the two distressed women and child from inside
the consulate grounds. Japanese officials are shown watching the
eviction passively and even stooping to pick up Chinese police
officers hats that had been knocked off in the fray. Later,
police reentered the consulate to forcibly remove the two men.
Despite the clear signs in the video that the Japanese officials
had made no attempt to prevent the police entering the consulate
grounds, the response of the Japanese government of Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi was to launch a diplomatic broadside against
China. It accused Beijing of violating Japans sovereignty
and demanded an apology and the immediate return of the North
Koreans to the Japanese consulate.
China rejected the Japanese claims out of hand. It insisted
that its officers had entered the consulate with the permission
of a Japanese vice-consulas the video tends to indicatein
order to remove a potential terrorist threat to the
Japanese staff. By May 15, reports had surfaced that the Japanese
ambassador to China had told embassy staff in Beijing on the morning
of May 8 that North Korean asylum seekers could be subversives
and that they should be driven out from Japanese facilities.
The vice-consul in Shenyang whom China alleges gave permission
to the police spoke twice during the incident with a Japanese
official in Beijing, who is believed to have repeated the ambassadors
instructions.
It was also reported that a Japanese vice-consul refused to
accept a letter from one of the five requesting asylum. This would
be entirely in line with the refugee policy of the Japanese government,
which is one of the most restrictive in the world. Despite being
the globes second largest economy and confronting a declining
population, Japan has accepted only 291 refugees in the past 20
years. As a general principle it does not even grant political
asylum, sending successful applicants to third countries
instead.
On May 16, buoyed by the evidence implicating Japanese officials,
Chinas foreign ministry declared Tokyo had put forward
unreasonable criticism and demands harming Chinas international
image and that it would deal with the problem
of the five alleged Koreans independently. On May
20, it bluntly announced it was no longer negotiating with the
Koizumi government over the issue. Finally, on May 22, China arranged
for the transfer of the five North Koreans to South Korea, via
the Philippines. A diplomat told Agence France Presse:
At first Japan asked China to give them back, then to interview
them, and finally just inform Tokyo about their fate. Japan, as
far as we know, got nothing.
Koizumi and his government, however, continue to insist on
their version of the incident: that the Chinese police entered
the consulate uninvited and rode roughshod over Japanese national
sovereignty. This stance does not have any innocent explanation.
Koizumis attempts to demonise China for abusing refugees
and Japans national pride is consistent with the foreign
policy of his cabinet. Koizumi is a lifetime member of the anti-China
and ultra-nationalist Fukuda faction of the ruling Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP). Its orientation has been to exploit the framework
of the US-Japan security alliance to legitimise Japanese imperialism
using military power to uphold its commercial and strategic interests
internationally. Since September 11, Koizumi has aggressively
aligned Japan with the Bush administrations war on
terrorism. The Japanese military has been deployed in support
of the war on Afghanistan and legislation is currently before
the parliament that will facilitate its involvement in any US
war on Iraq.
In order to build a social base for a militarist policy, Koizumi
has sought to stoke up Japanese nationalism and patriotism. His
government has supported the publication of right-wing school
textbooks justifying Japans wartime actions and he has made
controversial visits to the Yasukuni shrine to Japans war
dead. These actions have provoked opposition in China, Korea and
other countries invaded by Japan in the 1930s and 1940s.
By playing up Japans humiliation by China
in Shenyang, Koizumi clearly hoped to trigger an outpouring of
anger at Beijing. While his administration has suffered a fall
in its approval rating due to the public perception it mishandled
the entire affair, the incident has strengthened the agitation
of right-wing and nationalist layers.
On May 16, Takeshi Uemura, the senior political editor of the
Yomiuri Shimbun, Japans largest daily newspaper,
authored a column declaring the actions of the consulate staff
to be part of a broader Japanese malaisea tendency
to act in a masochistic way when it comes to a matter involving
China. He was referring to the postwar taboo in official
political circles on justifying Japans wartime actions or
advocating militarismpublicly at least. Uemura, among others,
wants an end to anything resembling an apologetic stance on Japans
brutal colonial past. His evidence of the masochistic
relationship included Koizumis failure to be even more provocative
over the textbook and shrine questions. In particular, he criticised
Koizumi for attempting to avoid tensions with China by visiting
Yasukuni last month, rather than on August 15, the anniversary
of the end of World War II.
The following day, a Yomiuri Shimbun editorial declared
that the collaboration of consul officials with the Chinese police
as being due to the presence of a pro-China clique within
the Foreign Ministry. An unnamed member of the LDP was quoted
describing the Shenyang incident as evidence the Foreign Ministry
was full of weaklings who would wag their tails when facing
China. There have been numerous calls for a purge of Japans
diplomatic staff in the country, including the removal of the
current ambassador.
Koizumi has made his own contribution to the rhetoric about
a Chinese fifth column within the Japanese political establishment.
On May 16 and 17, the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan
(DPJ) conducted its own investigation of the Shenyang incident
and concluded that the Japan consulate had provided support and
encouragement to the Chinese police to remove the asylum seekers.
Koizumi responded with a vitriolic attack on May 18: The
DPJs criticism that Japan is at fault is so masochistic.
We are caught up in grave negotiations with China and the party
should take that sort of thing into consideration. Why they like
China so much, I dont know. The DPJ should think carefully
about why Japan is protesting against China the way it is.
However, the fact the DPJ sent a delegation to China to discredit
Koizumis claims is evidence that his cabinet is far from
having things its own way. Its pro-US and anti-China stance is
fuelling opposition from powerful political forces that believe
the policies of the Bush administration are headed for a debacle
and wish to strengthen Tokyos political and economic relations
in Asia, especially with Beijing. The most prominent representative
of this layer is Makiko Tanaka, who Koizumi sacked as the foreign
minister in January. In latest opinion polls, Tanaka registers
as the most preferred candidate for prime minister while Koizumis
support has slumped to just 38 percentcompared with 80 percent
a year ago.
With Koizumi becoming ever more provocative toward China, it
is only a matter of time before the foreign policy differences
in Japanese ruling circles lead to a major political confrontation.
See Also:
US belligerence encourages
Japanese politician to rattle the nuclear sabre against China
[22 April 2002]
Corruption allegations against
Tanaka intensify factional warfare in Japan
[11 April 2002]
Bush visit to Japan cements
closer ties against China
[1 March 2002]
Bush's "evil axis"
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
Dismissal of Japanese foreign
minister may spark political turmoil
[5 February 2002]
Japan militarisation accelerates
after sinking of alleged North Korean spy ship
[9 January 2002]
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