Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stands to bow after his censure motion is rejected during the plenary session for his censure motion at the Upper House of the parliament in Tokyo September 18, 2015. REUTERS/Yuya Shino
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says the policy shift, which would
mark the biggest change in defense policy since the creation of Japan 's post-war military in 1954, is vital to
meet new challenges such as from a rising China .
But the bills have sparked massive protests from ordinary
citizens and others who say they violate the pacifist constitution and could
ensnare Japan
in US-led conflicts after 70 years of post-war peace. Abe's ratings have also
taken a hit.
"Recently we have noticed that voices in Japan opposing
the bill have become louder by the day," Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman Hong Lei told reporters on Friday.
"We demand that Japan earnestly listen to these
just voices domestically and internationally, learn the lessons of history,
uphold the path of peaceful development, speak and act cautiously in security
and military matters and take actual steps to maintain regional peace and
stability."
Parliament's session runs until Sept. 27, but ruling party
lawmakers are keen to have the upper house approve the bills - the last step to
enactment - before a five-day holiday starts on Saturday, when big street
demonstrations could erupt.
Abe's ruling bloc has an upper house majority, but major
opposition parties submitted censure motions in the chamber and a no confidence
motion in the lower house to block a vote.
One opposition member tried to delay the vote on a censure
motion against Abe by resorting to the "Ox Walk", or advancing at an
excruciatingly slow pace to the ballot box, but was ordered by the chamber's
president to speed up. He then took out prayer beads and mimicked a funeral
rite to symbolize what he has called the "death" of Abe's Liberal
Democratic Party.
The motion, as expected, was defeated.
The bills, which include legal revisions to drop a
long-standing ban on collective self-defense, or defending a friendly country
under attack, were approved on Thursday by an upper house panel in a chaotic,
raucous session.
Thousands of demonstrators have rallied near parliament
every day this week, chanting "Scrap the war bills" and "Abe
resign", and crowds gathered again on Friday.
The protests, while peaceful, have called to mind those that
forced Abe's grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, to resign 55 years ago after pushing
a US-Japan security treaty through parliament.
Besides ending the ban on collective self-defense in cases
where Japan faces a
"threat to its survival", the measures expand the scope for logistics
support for the militaries of the United States and others, and for
participation in peacekeeping.
The revisions will still leave Japan 's military constrained in
overseas operations by legal limits and a deeply rooted public anti-war
mindset.
Critics, however, say the changes make a mockery of the
pacifist constitution and deplore what they see as Abe's authoritarian mode of
pushing for enactment of the bills.
"The content, process and doctrine of the security
bills ... risk reversing the path we have walked for the past 70 years as a
country of peace and democracy," Yukio Edano, the second-most senior
leader of the opposition Democratic Party, told parliament's lower house.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/117731/japan-bills-to-expand-military-role-near-enactment-despite-protests
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