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Monday, April 30, 2007

Seoul, Tokyo lock horns on sea name

Seoul - South Korea is set to make waves at an international forum over the name of waters separating it from former colonial ruler Japan, officials said on Monday.

Seoul will send a 12-member delegation to the International Hydrographic Organisation (IHO) meeting to campaign for "East Sea" rather than "Sea of Japan", the foreign ministry said.

The IHO session in Monaco from May 7-11 will discuss updating global charts which at present refer only to the Sea of Japan. Seoul wants updated charts at least to include the name East Sea as well as the Sea of Japan.

"We will actively frustrate the sole use of Sea of Japan," a foreign ministry official handling the issue told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"The government's position is that both references - East Sea and Sea of Japan - should be written in parallel until an agreement is reached."

The sea's name is one of several longstanding disputes between the two nations.

Japan colonised Korea from 1910 until its 1945 defeat in World War II and during this time, the name "Sea of Japan" was widely used internationally.

Korea says the name "East Sea" goes back centuries.

The two nations also have a territorial dispute over a chain of rocky islets in the waters, called Dokdo in Korea and Takeshima in Japan. - Sapa-AFP

Friday, April 27, 2007

Turning Bush-Abe Alliance Into Friendship


Shinzo Abe’s grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, left, Senator Prescott Bush, the president’s grandfather, in shorts with club, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower, right, in an undated photo Mr. Abe gave to Mr. Bush.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Omiya City Community Band from Japan

HANDS ACROSS THE SEA at the Carlsbad Community Church, 3175 Harding St., Carlsbad, 760-436-6137. At 2:30 p.m. Sunday, April 29, Coastal Communities Concert Band will perform a joint concert with the Omiya City Community Band from Japan. $15. www.cccband.com


Comfort women for GIs

TOKYO -- Japan's practice of enslaving women to provide sex for its troops in World War II has a little-known sequel: After its surrender -- with tacit approval from the U.S. occupation authorities -- Japan set up a similar ''comfort women'' system for American GIs.

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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Muslims taking root in Niigata, Toyama ports

Used-car exports supporting minority enclaves, especially Pakistani, on Sea of Japan coast

By AKIRA KATO

NIIGATA (Kyodo) Hundreds of mostly Pakistani Muslims are forming communities in the Sea of Japan prefectures of Niigata and Toyama, thriving in businesses linked to exports of secondhand cars to Russia and the Middle East.

News photo
About 100 Muslim men come to Islamic Center Niigata each week for Friday prayers. The facility in the prefectural capital is near Higashi port. KYODO PHOTO

"Here is Little Pakistan," joked one Niigata resident. "Japanese people need a visa (to come here). I don't have a chance to talk to any Japanese."

The man said he lives, works and eats in a restaurant in the environs of Higashi port, about 20 km from the heart of the city of Niigata.

About 200 Pakistanis work in the port area, where used-car dealers display signboards painted green -- the color of the Pakistani flag. The language spoken is Urdu, but Russians can also be seen bicycling around the district.

Standing silently and inconspicuously behind a factory, a prefabricated mosque without a dome attracts about 100 Muslim men each week for Friday prayers. Chanting words from the Quran, they stand up and bow toward Mecca. They listen to a sermon delivered by Amjad Hassan, 43, an assistant professor at Niigata University who serves as their imam.

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Monday, April 23, 2007

A Conversation With Shinzo Abe

By Lally Weymouth

Sunday, April 22, 2007; Page B03

President Bush will welcome new Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the White House and Camp David this week. The first Japanese head of government born after 1945, Abe is a staunch nationalist who has aroused controversy with his dismissive remarks about "comfort women" -- women forced to serve the Japanese army as prostitutes during World War II. Newsweek-Washington Post's Lally Weymouth sat down with Abe in Tokyo to discuss issues ranging from changing Japan's constitution to forging a new relationship with China.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Mayor’s Death Forces Japan’s Crime Rings Into the Light















City employees and officials in Nagasaki on Thursday paid their final respects to Mayor Kazunaga Ito, who was killed on Tuesday. The man who killed Mr. Ito has links to Japan’s largest organized crime group.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Nagasaki Mayor Killed by Mobster

TOKYO (AP) -- The mayor of the Japanese city of Nagasaki was shot to death in a brazen attack Tuesday by an organized crime chief apparently enraged that the city refused to compensate him after his car was damaged at a public works construction site, news agencies reported.

The shooting was rare in a country where handguns are strictly banned and only four politicians are known to have been killed since World War II.

Mayor Iccho Ito, 61, was shot twice in the back at point-blank range outside a train station Tuesday evening, Nagasaki police official Rumi Tsujimoto said.

Read the whole story......

Sunday, April 15, 2007

What if you land in jail?

Terrie LloydTerrie Lloyd

Terrie's Take - Every Monday

What if you land in jail?

Ten days ago, the foreign Vice President of Dior Japan and his wife were charged with possession of drugs here in Tokyo. Apparently he tried mailing cocaine from a Paris address to his home in Tokyo and Customs tipped off the
Police. The Police raided his home and arrested his wife after...

Friday, April 06, 2007

Fishermen catch big, 100 year old Alaska rockfish

This March 2007 photo released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, shows Dr. Chris Wilson of NOAA's Alaska Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, Wash., holding a 38-inch ruler up to a giant shortraker rockfish.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

VIEWPOINT: Tokyo Station Redux

Tokyo Station, the sprawling red brick landmark with a main entrance facing the Imperial Palace, is being restored to Kingo Tatsuno's original design. This is ironic.

It is ironic because the nearly century-old station is the focal point of two modern, glitzy office building complexes, one in the Marunouchi District on its west side, and the other in the Nihonbashi and Yaesu areas on its east side. Mitsubishi Real Estate Co., one of the developers, intends to 'transform Marunouchi into a world-class center of dynamic interaction,' according to real estate consultant Dylan Robertson, writing in J@pan Inc magazine.

From Soseki Natsume and Ryunosuke Akutagawa to Hyakken Uchida and Hiroyuki Agawa -- Japanese novelists who have written about railroads are numerous. One novelist, Natsuo Sekikawa, offered an explanation for the large number of railroad buffs among baby boomers. 'The heyday of the National Railways coincided with the high economic growth period, a period of need and hope.' There may be Japanese who, when they recall vernal rites such as college entrance exams, matriculation, or job hunting, see in their mind's eye Tokyo Station.

The National Railways directed Tatsuno to design a station after the style of a Momoyama palace, since the building would face Edo Castle. But when the architect showed them design to the Emperor, the castle's post-Restoration resident, His Majesty remarked, 'Stations and the like are best rendered in a foreign style.' Tatsuno returned to the drawing board and designed a Renaissance-style station. But the architect had still another master. Shimpei Goto, director of the National Railways and later mayor of Tokyo, examined Tatsuno's blueprint. 'Japan defeated Imperial Russia,' he said. 'The station will be the gateway to Japan. This is not of sufficient scale. Design a station that will awe the world.' Thereafter Tatsuno modeled the station after Amsterdam Central.

Tokyo Central Station does not awe today, but would have been impressive then. Even if it hadn't suffered a dimension-reducing vicissitude, it has been relatively diminished as the city grew upward and buildings inched closer. Today it is a landmark invisible for the surrounding buildings.

The preservation work to the station will restore the third story and the fourth-story octagonal domes, all of which were consumed by fire in an air raid on May 25, 1945.

'The redevelopment...efforts on the East and West sides of Tokyo Station...are...leading the way for the country as a whole to reposition itself in the global economy,' notes Robertson. And the fulcrum of that repositioning will be an image of 19th century Amsterdam. Ironic indeed.

Burritt Sabin

We welcome your viewpoint: editors@japaninc.com

http://www.japaninc.com

Japan's First Family Social Network is here!

Are you raising a family in Japan? Do you speak English?

Would you like to meet other English speaking families in
your area? Piqniq is a Social Network Service tailored
specifically for you!
Our concept is 'Families helping Families' and we invite
anyone that wants to meet other families, help other families,
or discuss family-related issues pertinent to life in Japan
to come and join the Piqniq today!

For more information: www.piqniq.jp

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Disaster Relief in Japan by Ken Joseph Jr.

Monzen, Japan

Four Christian Volunteers from Hong Kong were detained by police at the Morooka Kominkan Emergency Housing shelter in Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture.

Three Hong Kong Missionaries, residents of nearby Toyama and a friend visiting from Hong Kong, touched by the reports they had seen on TV of the 7.1 earthquake that hit Northern Japan took a day off work to visit the site of the disaster.

Arriving in Wajima they were careful to officially register at the local Volunteer Center.

Upon registration they were sent to the Morooka Kominkan where nearly 250 townspeople – mostly elderly were staying.

Receiving a nametag with their names on at approximately 1:30PM on Wednesday, March 28, they proceeded to their assigned place to assist in the disaster efforts.

“Upon arriving at the facility at approximately 2PM we inquired as to where we were to start helping the people. Just as we began our work a policewoman came up to us and demanded our Passports.”

We were quite surprised at the “welcome” to us that had come from so far to help those in need at the earthquake site. Three of us showed our Alien Registration Cards and the fourth who was visiting for a few days from Hong Kong had simply left her Passport at home as we had left in a hurry.”

Normally a simple confirmation would have elicited a Passport Number and faxed copy of the document if needed.

Instead the local Anamizu Police Station according to the Hong Kong volunteers kept them for nearly two hours – from 2PM until nearly 4PM - at the Moorooka Kominkan or public hall in a small room.

From there at approximately 4PM they were taken to the local police station for another nearly two hours of interrogation finally being let go at approximately 6pm.

According to representative Kazunori Ueda of the Anamizu Police Station “we only spoke with them for an hour or so and as there were no problems found they were allowed to proceed with their volunteer activities.”

Confirmation with the hapless Chinese volunteers elicited a very strong reaction to the discrepancy.

Kanazawa, the capitol of Ishikawa Prefecture is the site for the upcoming G7 Summit and initial reactions to the incident have been calls for the site of the summit to be moved to a more hospitable location in Japan.

Japanese volunteer Yoshitaka Ishihara, present at much of the interrogation expressed shock at the way those coming to help were treated.

“It was shocking to see the way these people who had come to help us Japanese in need as a result of the earthquake were treated. It was unacceptable and I am embarrassed as a Japanese to have seen the terrible treatment to those that came to help. They should move the Summit to another location.

Calls for moving the summit to another location is growing and a reaction from the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo to the unprecedented treatment of its Citizens who tried to help with the Noto Earthquake are expected.

The Noto region of Japan has historic precedent in that it was one of the last areas where the `Ikki` or peasent uprising, mostly by Kirishitan or Indigenous Japanese Christians went on for nearly 100 years.

Although nominally seen as a democratic country with the rule of law, incidents such as this show the dark side of a country that continues to persecute the weak, have an unaceptable reaction to foreigners and a very weak legal system.

Whether Japan can be a world leader while at the same time acting in such a manner is a question many in the region are asking, particularly as the nation rearms, continues to deny wartime responsibility and begins preparations to change its peaceful constitution.

info@keikyo.com

French TGV Train Sets Rail Speed Record

A French train hit new speed records Tuesday near the eastern city of Strasbourg, zipping along the tracks at 574.8 kilometers (357.2 miles) per hour. The company hopes for more international customers.

The train is an experimental version of the Traine a Grande Vitesse (TGV), equipped with two supercharged locomotives and extra-large wheels. It easily beat the previous 515.3 kph record set by a TGV in 1990.