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			License to boogie: Japan moves to 
			ease dancing ban 
			
   
            
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            [June 24, 2014]  
			By Sophie Knight 
			TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's government 
			is considering relaxing a law that forbids late-night dancing in 
			public establishments, according to a draft proposal reviewed by 
			Reuters, potentially ending police raids that have shuttered 
			nightclubs across the country. 
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				 Dancing at public venues is technically illegal in Japan and 
				is only permitted until midnight in clubs with a special 
				license, a vestige of a law on "businesses affecting public 
				morals", which was passed in 1948 to stamp out prostitution 
				linked to dance halls but over the years was all but forgotten. 
				 
				The police renewed enforcement of the law four years ago, 
				however, with a crackdown on bars and clubs after a student was 
				killed in a brawl in Osaka, Japan's second-largest metropolitan 
				area, and worries mounted about the country's youth culture 
				against a backdrop of celebrity drug scandals. 
				 
				Raids invoking the law spread to Tokyo and other cities, with 
				police breaking up parties from techno clubs to salsa bars and 
				arresting dozens on suspicion of gang connections or tax 
				violations, while closing venues known for noise complaints. 
				  
				
				  
				
				 
				Now, a public backlash against the law has spurred debate in 
				parliament and led the government to ease up as part of a 
				broader deregulation drive by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who 
				wants to stimulate the economy and prepare for an increase in 
				tourism ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. 
				 
				"I think politicians and authorities are feeling pressure as 
				they don't want Japan to be seen as a boring place by foreign 
				tourists," said Takahiro Saito, a Tokyo-based lawyer who 
				spearheaded a movement against the law called "Let's Dance". The 
				group submitted a petition of 150,000 signatures to the Diet in 
				May 2013. 
				 
				The petition prompted a group of nonpartisan lawmakers to urge 
				reassessment of the law and in April the Osaka District Court 
				exonerated a club owner charged for violating the dance ban, 
				setting a legal precedent. 
			
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			This week the prime minister will submit for government approval a 
			deregulation plan, seen by Reuters, which proposes removing the 
			clause in the law that limits dancing to clubs with a special 
			license and bans all dancing after midnight or 1 a.m. 
			
			The government will have until the end of March next year to make a 
			decision on how or whether to change the legislation after talking 
			to related parties, the proposal says. 
			 
			Because the law was often used as a pretext to act against or 
			investigate separate problems such as rowdy clubgoers, illegal drugs 
			or suspected gangster involvement, changing the law may not end 
			police intrusions into clubland. 
			 
			"If they cut the part referring to dance out of the law then at the 
			very least they won't stop people dancing any more. But the police 
			may strengthen their efforts to target problems such as noise and 
			other nuisances to the neighborhood," said Saito. 
			 
			"For conservative parliament members, there is still a strong image 
			of clubs being a place where young people cause trouble". 
			 
			(Editing by Edmund Klamann and Rachel Armstrong) 
				
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