U.S. embassy in Tokyo warns of 'suspected racial profiling' by Japanese
police
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[December 06, 2021]
By Chang-Ran Kim and Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - The United States Embassy
in Tokyo on Monday warned in a tweet of incidents of suspected racial
profiling of non-Japanese by Japanese police.
Japan is a mostly ethnically homogeneous country where some people
equate more immigrants with a rise in crime, although foreign labour is
increasingly needed to make up for a declining and ageing population.
"The U.S. Embassy has received reports of foreigners stopped and
searched by Japanese police in suspected racial profiling incidents.
Several were detained, questioned, and searched," the tweet said.
"U.S. citizens should carry proof of immigration and request consular
notification if detained."
The tweet is an unusual move from the United States, a key Japanese
ally.
A U.S. Embassy spokesperson said the embassy had nothing further to add
to the tweet, and the National Police Agency could not immediately
comment.
Asked about the U.S. embassy warning, top government spokesman Hirokazu
Matsuno said only that police question suspicious individuals based on
various factors but that those decisions are not based on a person's
ethnicity or nationality.
A week ago, Japan closed its borders to all non-resident foreigners in
one of the strongest global measures taken to prevent the spread of the
Omicron variant of the coronavirus.
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Police officers stand guard near the U.S. embassy in Tokyo, November
5, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Naomi Kawahara, founder of advocacy group Japan for
Black Lives, said racial profiling by Japanese police was nothing
new, particularly for foreigners or mixed-race Japanese people of
colour.
"I had a friend who was questioned by police more than 30 times in
the six years that he lived here," she told Reuters of her
African-American friend, who left Japan a few years ago.
"Sometimes it was in front of his house, as he was about to walk his
dog."
(Reporting by Chang-ran Kim, Sakura Murakami and Elaine Lies;
Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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