Japan’s parliament passed contentious security bills into law early Saturday, in a move that could see Japanese troops fight abroad for the first time in 70 years.
Lawmakers approved the bills to ease restrictions on the country’s tightly controlled military, but the changes will not see Japanese troops dispatched to war zones any time soon because the laws may still be overturned by the supreme court.
Unable to muster support to amend clauses enshrining pacifism, Abe opted instead to re-interpret the document for the purpose of his bills, ignoring warnings from scholars and lawyers that they are unconstitutional.
Security measures. Japanese lawmakers applaud after they passed two bills that would effectively allow Japanese troops to fight overseas for the first time in 70 years. AFP PHOTO
But the
“The Philippines
welcomes the passage of legislation on national security by the National Diet
of Japan. We look forward to efforts that strengthen our Strategic
Partnership with Japan
and those that would contribute further to shared goals of greater peace,
stability, and mutual prosperity in the international community,” Foreign
Secretary Albert del Rosario said in a statement.
But outside the
Japanese Diet, thousands rallied in a last-ditch show of opposition to laws
they fear could fundamentally reshape the proudly pacifist nation.
The changes,
which would allow Japanese troops to fight in defense of allies, have drawn
tens of thousands of people from across society onto the streets in almost
daily protests, in a show of public anger rarely seen on such a scale.
Outside
parliament protesters, estimated at over 10,000, raised their voices louder as
news of the decision spread through the crowd, chanting: “Protect the
constitution.” One sign read: “Spread peace not war.”
“I’m ready to
stay here all night. The government cannot ignore such a demonstration,” said
60-year-old farmer Yukiko Ogawa. “It is vital that we make our opinion known,
that we are here.”
Seiji Kawabe, 49,
vowed the movement would live on, adding: “We have enough natural disasters,
typhoons, earthquakes... we don’t need any man-made disasters.”
Organizers said
more than 40,000 had gathered for Friday night’s rally, while police estimated
the size of the crowd at some 11,000.
Nationalist Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe says the changes were a normalization of Japan ’s military policy, which has been
restricted to self-defense and aid missions by a pacifist constitution imposed
by the US
after World War II.
He and his
backers say the laws are necessary because of threats from an increasingly
belligerent China and
unstable North Korea .
Opponents argue
they go against both the constitution and the national psyche, and could see Japan dragged
into far-flung American wars.
Speaking after
the vote, Abe said the changes were “necessary in order to protect people’s
lives and peaceful way of life.”
“This is designed
to prevent wars,” he told journalists.
The decision came
after days of emotional debate and delaying tactics by the opposition, which in
Thursday erupted into scuffles as politicians physically tried to block a
committee approving the bills.
President of the
upper house Masaaki Yamazaki said the bills passed with 148 lawmakers voting in
favor, compared to 90 against.
Abe has faced
fierce criticism for both the laws themselves and the way he has driven them
through in the face of public opposition.
There are growing
signs this is taking a political toll—opinion polls show the vast majority of
Japanese are against the changes, and Abe’s once sky-high approval rating is
dropping.
In protests
outside parliament earlier in the day, Yoko Fujiwara stood among the crowds
with her six-year-old daughter, who carried a handwritten sign saying: “We do
not forgive. Children are angry, too.”
“I came to the
protest together with my daughter to show what real democracy is like,” said
the 40-year-old graduate law student.
Opponents of the
laws, including a Nobel Prize winner, popular musicians and other prominent
figures, say the changes could fundamentally alter Japan .
Security experts
say the laws will force a reevaluation of Japan ’s place on the world stage.
“The bills are a
psychological message to the world that an era in which Japan should not be involved in conflicts because
of its exclusively defense-oriented policy is over,” said Hideshi Takesada, a
professor at Takushoku University in Tokyo .
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2015/09/20/diet-oks-troop-deployment-abroad/
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