Japan
cinema legend Miyazaki joins protests against move to
widen military role
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[July 13, 2015] By
Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan
cannot use military strength to counter China, Hayao
Miyazaki, famed director of the Oscar-winning film
"Spirited Away", said on Monday, as he joined a chorus
of protest against a change in Japan's security policy.
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Miyazaki, 74, has long spoken out against war and Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe's desire for measures allowing broader use
of Japan's military, particularly in his final film, "The Wind
Rises", which earned him accusations of being a traitor.
Abe's rush to push through changes to Japan's pacifist
constitution, arguing that China's growing strength needs to be
countered, was "exactly the opposite" of what he should do,
Miyazaki told a rare news conference.
"It is impossible to stop China's power through military
strength," the famously reclusive master of animated fantasy,
whose films have made him a revered household name in Japan,
said at his suburban Tokyo studio.
"They need to think of a different way. That's why our pacifist
constitution was created."
"The Wind Rises," which marked Miyazaki's 2013 retirement from
full-length animated films, told the story of Jiro Horikoshi,
the man who designed Japan's feared "Zero" fighter.
The film, and an essay criticising "people who mess around with
our constitution," earned him unprecedented criticism and
thousands of Internet comments, ranging from disappointment at
his foray into politics to those who branded him a traitor.
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Miyazaki said Japanese had lost their sense of history and few
understood the import of the constitution.
"The years of war were a terrible experience for Japan, with some 3
million people losing their lives," added Miyazaki, whom some see as
Japan's answer to Walt Disney.
"Older people can't forget that. For them, the pacifist constitution
was like a ray of light."
Miyazaki, who now works on short films for the museum run by his
Studio Ghibli, also heads a fund to block a new U.S. military base
on the island of Okinawa, which took devastating losses as Japan's
only site of a land battle and hosts the majority of U.S. troops in
the country.
"I think that, as residents of a small island nation on the edge of
the world, we should live in peace," he said.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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