133 activists including Noam Chomsky and Oliver Stone issue statement supporting revocation of land reclamation approval in Okinawa

133 activists including Noam Chomsky and Oliver Stone issue statement supporting revocation of land reclamation approval in Okinawa

Noam Chomsky


September 8, 2018 Ryukyu Shimpo online edition

 

On September 7, 133 scholars and informed persons from around the world including the US, Canada and Australia signed and issued a statement in support of the Okinawa Prefectural Government’s revocation of the land reclamation approval for the Futenma replacement facility being constructed in Henoko, Nago City, originally given by former Governor Hirokazu Nakaima.

The statement points out that, “Base construction flies in the face of constitutional principles such as popular sovereignty and the right to regional self-government.”

It calls on US President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to promptly halt construction of the Henoko base, and to demilitarize Okinawa.

This is the 4th international statement made by informed persons from around the world in relation to construction in Henoko.

The international statement was signed starting with linguist Noam Chomsky and Academy Award winning director Oliver Stone, followed by other scholars and cultured persons from around the world including Pulitzer Prize winner John Dower and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Maguire.

Oliver Stone

In January 2014 Chomsky and others released a prior statement opposing the Futenma replacement facility and requesting the immediate and unconditional return of Futenma Air Station’s land to Okinawa.

 

Even following the 2014 international statement the US and Japanese governments ignored Okinawans’ popular will and continued forcing through construction of the replacement facility including setting dates to deposit soil in the ocean.

Those signed on to the statement saw that the circumstances were not getting any better but rather getting even worse, so they decided to raise their voices again.

In addition to addressing the replacement facility being built in Henoko, the newest statement has also raised the issue of SDF deployment to the Nansei Islands such as Miyako Island, Ishigaki Island, and Amami Oshima.

It pointed out that, “It is time to rethink the ‘fortress’ role assigned to Okinawa by successive Japanese governments and U.S. military and strategic planners and to begin to articulate a role for Okinawa, including its ‘frontier’ islands, as the centre of a de-militarized community to be built around the East China Sea.”

John Dower

 

Furthermore, this new statement asserts, “Okinawan opposition to the construction of a new base has been constant, reaching at times over 80 per cent in public opinion surveys, and has been repeatedly affirmed in elections.”

Those who signed the statement are also encouraging the candidates up for election for the Governorship of Okinawa on September 30 to make clear their intent to carry out the manifest will of the Okinawan people to close Futenma Air Station and stop

construction in Henoko.

 

(English translation by T&CT and Erin Jones)

 

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