'Nowhere to hide': North Korean missiles
spur anxiety in Japan fishing town
Send a link to a friend
[October 19, 2017]
By Malcolm Foster
ERIMO, Japan (Reuters) - Ever since North
Korea lobbed two missiles far above this windswept fishing town on
Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, seaweed farmer Mitsuyo Kawamura
says she's been on edge.
"Now when I hear a loud sound, I look outside, I look out at the ocean,"
68-year-old Kawamura said from her seaside cottage in Erimo, where she
lays out long dark strands of kombu seaweed on stones to dry in the sun.
"I feel anxious, like I never know when it will come again."
As Japan prepares to vote in Sunday's national election, Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe has called North Korea's escalating threats -- it also
conducted a sixth nuclear test last month -- a "national crisis" that
only he can lead Japan through.
Yet the missiles that flew over Erimo on Aug. 29 and Sept. 15 created an
eerie threat: No one saw or heard them. They streaked by several hundred
kilometers above land, too high to see with the naked eye, before
splashing into the Pacific more than 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) to the
east.
Warnings of the missiles spread through sirens and government-issued
"J-alerts" on millions of cell phones throughout Japan, jolting some out
of sleep.
Kawamura has since stocked up on extra food and keeps the radio on to
listen for more warnings. Like many residents here -- and across Japan
-- she feels helpless, unsure of how to protect herself.
"When it's launched, it could land here just moments later," she said.
"There's nowhere to hide."
Abe's rhetoric has grown harsher as North Korea has threatened to "sink"
Japan and seems intent on developing nuclear warheads that can reach the
U.S. mainland. He has repeatedly backed U.S. President Donald Trump's
"all-options-on-the-table" stance and says now is not the time for
dialogue.
"They promised in 1994 and again in 2005 that they would abandon their
nuclear program. But they have broken their word and developed nuclear
devices and missiles," Abe said at a campaign rally last week. "We're
not going to be deceived anymore."
To protect itself, Japan has deployed 34 Patriot PAC-3 anti-missile
batteries around the country, including one in Hokkaido, and Aegis
defense systems on several destroyers. U.S. forces in Japan also have
ballistic missile defense equipment that can -- if all goes well -- take
out a missile in mid-flight.
'FIRE ONE BACK'
The rockets thrust tiny Erimo, population 4,850, into the global
spotlight. Maps on TV broadcasts showed the missiles' flight paths over
nearby Cape Erimo, a jagged point that juts into the Pacific where seals
frolic.
At the town's docks, where fishermen sorted through the morning's haul
of salmon, tossing them into vats of ice water, strong support for Abe
was mixed with worries that he's too strident, putting Japan at risk.
"Right now, no one's better than Abe," said Satoru Narita, a 72-year-old
fisherman.
If anything, Japan has been too passive, said 23-year-old Ryosuke
Kinoshita, who supports Abe's ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
"Next time they launch one, I'd almost like to see us fire one back," he
said. "We can't live in peace and safety."
But Haruki Suminoya, head of Erimo's fishing union, cautioned that being
overly aggressive could provoke North Korea into lashing out.
"Abe's approach is too strong, too hardline," he said. "A more
restrained approach is better."
The recent war of words between Trump and North Korea unsettled many
residents, who pointed out they were a much closer target than the
United States.
[to top of second column] |
A poster showing face of Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is
also ruling Liberal Democratic Party leader, is displayed in Erimo
Town, on Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, October 12, 2017.
Picture taken October 12, 2017. REUTERS/Malcolm Foster
While pressure was needed toward North Korea, being too tough could
be disastrous, said Mayor Masaki Ohnishi. "If North Korea does
something serious, Japan is within shooting range."
So far, it seems that Abe is winning over voters. Nationwide polls
show the LDP is headed for a big win this weekend.
REVISING CONSTITUTION
Erimo residents were divided on Abe's signature policy of revising
Japan's war-renouncing constitution to clarify the status of the
country's military. Critics worry that it could lead to an expanded
role for the armed forces overseas and entangle it in U.S.-led
conflicts.
But Shinto priest Hirotaka Tezuka, 39, said the constitution had
grown outdated. "We need a constitution that's better suited to the
present era."
Yoshihiro Naito, 77, opposed the idea. "The commitment we've made
not to wage war has kept Japan safe." He plans to vote for an
opposition party because he thinks Abe and the LDP have become too
powerful.
Town officials said they have not taken any particular precautionary
steps following the recent missile launches, nor do they plan any
"duck and cover" drills that have been held elsewhere.
The town has loud speakers on 50 tall poles to broadcast warnings
for tsunamis, typhoons -- and now missiles. In recent months, they
have installed wireless units in 1,500 of the 2,200 homes so people
can hear them when they are indoors.
Erimo also has emergency stocks of food, water and other supplies,
the mayor said. That's particularly important for Erimo because it
is linked to the rest of Hokkaido by only one coast-hugging road,
which gets closed several times a year due to heavy rains or massive
waves.
Local fishermen are nervous about North Korea's warning that it
might conduct a hydrogen bomb test over the Pacific, which they
worry would contaminate the water like the Fukushima nuclear
disaster did in 2011.
"The radiation would make all the fish inedible," said Narita, the
elderly fisherman. "Like in Fukushima, we couldn't do our jobs."
The town's dwindling fishing industry has already been hit hard by a
plunge in the salmon catch as well as by a dearth of youngsters to
take over the trade.
When young people move away to cities such as Sapporo, Hokkaido's
capital, sometimes their parents follow them, residents said.
Erimo's population, which peaked above 9,000 in the 1960s, has
fallen to nearly half that level.
"We're a fishing town," said Naito, "so if we can't catch fish any
more, we're finished."
(Reporting by Malcolm Foster; Editing by Bill Tarrant)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|