Kerry B. Collison Asia News
Friday, July 26, 2013
Emerging hate groups in Japan
What does a high-school graduate who has only known part-time work have in common with an elite researcher educated at the prestigious University of Tokyo?
How are they connected to the owner of a beauty parlor, a bank employee, a truck driver, a bar owner, an electrician, a bar hostess, and the son of a landowner family?
They all belong to an ultra-right organisation named the Civil Association against Privileges for the Resident Koreans (
Zainichi tokken wo yurusanai shimin no kai
, or
Zaitokukai
). The high-school graduate, known by the pseudonym Sakurai Makoto, is the group’s president, the researcher his deputy.
The
Zaitokukai
organises events for participants to congregate at minority residential areas and blare threatening slogans and derogatory slurs via loudspeakers. The group, founded in 2007, can be regarded as the first hate group in post-war Japan. While conventional radical right-wing groups, or
uyoku dantai
, are also known for their noisy activities with military-style vans, their targets
have been limited
to institutions and influential figures. In contrast, the
Zaitokukai
’s main targets include immigrants and minorities. It has harassed resident Koreans, Filipinos, Chinese, Japan’s
Burakumin
minorities and even a major Buddhist faction, the
Soka gakkai
. In Japan, abuse and harassment against minority citizens and foreigners are on the rise. The
Zaitokukai
and similar but smaller groups have not yet hurt anyone physically, but the emergence of such groups is disturbing by itself.
What factors are behind the recent emergence of the movement? One conventional explanation is that people are anxious about identity as poor economic conditions since the 1990s foster strong hatred against minorities and foreigners. Journalist Yasuda Koichi
has held this view
, while Tessa Morris-Suzuki
explains
the
Zaitokukai
by associating it with the ‘soft repression’ of the regime led by rightist Prime Minister Abe Shinzo. In contrast, Beverley Anne Yamamoto argues the group
could be a backlash
against a new discourse of multiculturalism in Japan.
Yasuda Koichi’s report in particular
makes clear
the miscellaneous backgrounds of
Zaitokukai
members. The
Zaitokukai
’s
official webpage
stated that it had about 13,400 members as of June 2013. Most of these people seem to have been recruited through the internet. The cadres of the
Zaitokukai
explained to Yasuda Koichi that the core members of the group were web right-wingers who often posted on 2-Channel, a large internet forum that enables controversy because posters are perfectly anonymous.
Non-core members whom Yasuda interviewed told him that they accessed
Nico nico douga
(the Japanese equivalent of Youtube) to view Sakurai Makoto’s speeches, which openly use racial slurs and dirty words To deepen their ‘knowledge’, non-core members then went to 2-Channel.
According to Yasuda
, the
Zaitokukai
people he interviewed believed they were the weak and downtrodden, who had been deprived of their rights as citizens, and had vowed to ‘fight’ against what they perceived as reverse discrimination in Japan.
The
Zaitokukai
are yet to take serious action to achieve their goals. A typical
Zaitokukai
cadre
vaguely stated
in May 2013 that they were thinking about petitioning politicians in the future, but did not show any clear plans. It seems they have not tried to systematically mobilise members and potential supporters for bloc voting. None of the cadres and members have run for elections.
Zaitokukai
people seem to be basically happy finding comrades and gathering in towns to intimidate and insult minorities and foreigners. This may be a reason why the
Zaitokukai
has not aligned with conventional moderate and radical right-wing groups, which usually have a clearer agenda.
The
Zaitokukai
movement shows no sign of abating, and they could become stronger by tapping into dissatisfaction in Japan. To be sure, there have been substantial counter-protests and demonstrations against the
Zaitokukai
. Some were led by
existing leftist groups
while others seemed to be
organised by new, unknown groups
. People have shown their anger by burning the group’s banners and by marching in parallel with the
Zaitokukai,
shouting ‘they are a racist group’. In June 2013, the
Zaitokukai
president and some cadres
were arrested by police
in a physical skirmish with members of the counter-movement.
But counter-movements are evidently insufficient to stop the
Zaitokukai
from harming minorities in Japan. The
Zaitokukai
are inflicting psychological damage on minorities and foreigners, and they are doing so legally. The legal framework to restrain hate speeches in Japan is very weak, so even when indictments against the
Zaitokukai
have been made, the courts have handled them as libel cases or invoked the lesser charge of ‘committing forceful obstruction of business’. Japan must protect its minorities by law and enact anti-discrimination laws. Author: Daiki Shibuichi, Centennial College, Hong Kong
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