U.S. marine accused of drunk driving
after Japanese man dies in crash
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[November 20, 2017]
TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japanese man was
killed in a truck collision involving a 21-year-old U.S. marine who was
well over the legal alcohol limit for driving, police said of a case
that was likely to stoke resentment over the U.S. military presence on
the southern island of Okinawa.
In response to the Sunday's fatal accident, U.S. forces in Japan banned,
until further notice, all personnel in the country from drinking of
alcohol.
"The Defence and Foreign Ministries have lodged a stern representation
to the U.S. forces in Japan and the U.S. embassy in Japan, asking for
the enforcement of discipline, prevention of recurrence and sincere
response to the bereaved," Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide
Suga told a regular news conference on Monday.
U.S. Ambassador to Japan William Hagerty expressed his condolences and
offered an apology, Suga said.
The accident occurred at an intersection in the city of Naha early
Sunday morning. The marine was driving a military truck, and the
61-year-old crash victim was in a light truck.
The Japanese man was later pronounced dead, while the U.S. serviceman,
who was arrested for the fatal accident and driving under the influence
of alcohol, suffered scratches, a police official in Naha said.
The official said a breath test showed the marine was as much as three
times over the legal limit for alcohol.
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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/File Photo
"When our service members fail to live up to the high standards we
set for them, it damages the bonds between bases and local
communities and make it harder for us to accomplish our mission," a
statement from the U.S. forces in Japan said.
Last year, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe protested to then-U.S.
President Barack Obama about the killing of a young woman in
Okinawa, for which a U.S. base worker had been charged.
Obama, who was visiting Japan for a Group of Seven summit, expressed
"deepest regrets."
The case is under trial.
Residents in Okinawa, a reluctant host to the bulk of U.S. bases in
Japan, believe that they shoulder an unfair burden in supporting the
U.S. military presence in Japan.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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