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		U.S. dangles large land return as 
		anti-base resentment surges in Okinawa 
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		 [June 18, 2016] 
		By Tim Kelly 
 OKINAWA, Japan (Reuters) - The United 
		States Marine Corps in Okinawa may hand back a 10,000 acre (40.5 square 
		km) tract of land to Japan early next year, its commander said on 
		Saturday, as Washington confronts a surge in opposition to U.S. military 
		bases there following the murder of a Japanese woman.
 The return of the land, part of a jungle training camp, known as 
			Camp Gonsalves in Northern Okinawa, was agreed in 1996, but has been 
			delayed by protesters blocking the construction of helipads by the 
			Japanese government that the Marines say they need before the 
			handover.
 "There have been discussions recently and we are hopeful that in the 
			second half of this year there will be some movement," Lieutenant 
			General Lawrence D. Nicholson said at his headquarters at Camp 
			Foster in Okinawa. "It would be the largest land return since 1972."
 
 Okinawa, which was under U.S. occupation until 1972, still hosts 
			30,000 military personnel living and working on bases that cover a 
			fifth of the island. Local resentment about that burden surged after 
			an American civilian working at a U.S. base was arrested last month 
			in connection with the murder of a local 20-year-old Japanese woman.
 
		
		 The incident has spurred calls, backed by Okinawa Governor Takeshi 
			Onaga, for the United States to move military personnel off the 
			island. In 1996 the U.S. and Japanese governments agreed to relocate 
			some troops outside Okinawa and move others to less populated parts 
			of the island after the rape of a Japanese schoolgirl by three U.S. 
			servicemen.
 "They came with guns and bulldozed people's homes to build their 
			bases. We didn't give it to them," said Junsei Shimoji a 76-year-old 
			taxi driver whose family home was destroyed during the U.S. invasion 
			of the island in 1945 at the end of World War Two.
 
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			Visitors look out over U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in 
			Ginowan on Okinawa May 3, 2010. REUTERS/Issei Kato/Files 
            
			 
			Nicholson announced a 30-day mourning period following the murder 
			last month, banning marines from drinking at bars off base.
 "If you violate Japanese law, you will be subject to it and I think 
			that is an important and strong message that the Okinawan people 
			need to know," he said
 
 Troops will be allowed back into public bars from June 25, Nicholson 
			said, although major fourth of July celebrations such as firework 
			displays will be canceled.
 
 "We are going to have a subdued fourth of July, and that is on all 
			of Okinawa and probably throughout the whole of Japan," he said.
 
 Nicholson said he has ordered all of his troops to stay away from a 
			demonstration on Sunday in Okinawa's capital, Naha, to protest 
			against U.S. bases. The organizers are expecting thousands of people 
			at what could be the biggest such gathering in at least two decades.
 
 (Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Richard Pullin)
 
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