Japanese
row over U.S. island base move deepens
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[March 23, 2015]
TOKYO (Reuters) - A clash between
Japan's central government and Okinawa island, host to the bulk of U.S.
troops in Japan, deepened on Monday when the southern island's governor
ordered a halt to underwater work at the site of a planned relocation of
a U.S. Marine base.
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Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government and Okinawa have been on a
collision course since anti-base conservative Takeshi Onaga was
elected governor last November and ruling party candidates were
trounced in a December general election.
Onaga told a news conference that he was ordering local defense
ministry officials to halt the underwater survey work, which the
prefecture fears is harming local coral reefs, a prefecture official
said.
If those activities are not stopped within a week, Onaga may rescind
approval for drilling operations given by his predecessor in
December 2012, he said.
Delays to the plan to move the Futenma base to a less populous area
of northern Okinawa could be a headache for Abe ahead of an April
26-May 3 visit to the United States, announced on Monday.
A summit with President Barack Obama is expected to highlight
Washington's approval of Abe's more muscular security policy amid
concerns about rising Chinese influence in the region.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference the
defense ministry was examining the documents from the governor but
that the very fact he had taken this step was "extremely
regrettable" since the work had previously been approved by the
prefecture. That approval was given by Onaga's predecessor, whom he
defeated in last year's election.
"At present we do not recognize any reason to halt the work," he
said.
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The United States and Japan agreed in 1996 to close the Futenma
Marines air base, located in a populous part of the island. But
plans for a replacement stalled in the face of opposition from
residents, many of whom associate the bases with noise, pollution
and crime and resent bearing what they see as an unfair burden for
the U.S.-Japan security alliance.
Okinawa, which was not returned to Japanese sovereignty until 27
years after Tokyo's defeat in World War Two, still hosts nearly 75
percent of the U.S. military presence in Japan, accounting for 18
percent of its land area.
(Reporting by Nobuhiro Kubo, Mari Saito and Linda Sieg; Editing by
Nick Macfie)
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