About 6,000 people held an anti-US rally yesterday in southern Japan's
Okinawa Prefecture, calling for revising a basic Japan-US security law and
reducing the US military presence on the island.
The rally, organized by local women's groups and labor unions in the town of
Chatan, was in protest against a series of crimes involving US servicemen since
mid February, when a US Marine allegedly raped a local minor girl.
Okinawa has been lodging protests against the governments of Japan and the
United States as crimes and accidents have been repeated due to the presence of
the military bases here, but the voices have been trampled upon and heinous
incidents have continued, Okinawa city Mayor Mitsuko Tomon said while addressing
the rally.
A resolution passed by the rally said the US army failed to fulfill its
promise of strengthening discipline and preventing recurrence of crimes, and
pertaining problems could never be resolved only by "improved implementation" of
the Japan-US Status of Forces Agreement.
The resolution called for a radical revision of the current agreement, which
put the US army in judicial advantage, and demanded further curtailment of US
military bases and reduction of Japan-based US servicemen.
The rape case in mid February and a series of crimes committed by US soldiers
enraged local Okinawan people and aroused a new wave of anti-US military
presence sentiment throughout Japan.