China Daily

Opponents vow to halt contentiou­s bill

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TOKYO — The Cabinet of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday approved a bill that criminaliz­es the act of preparing for terrorism and other serious crimes, amid vast political and public opposition.

The government maintains that the bill is needed to protect against potential acts of terrorism that may occur during the 2020 Olympics and Paralympic­s in Tokyo, with Abe’s administra­tion claiming that the latest version of the bill is less invasive than previous versions that were submitted and failed.

But opposition parties, lawyers and civic groups have voiced major concerns that the bill will lead to the government being allowed to invade the privacy of ordinary citizens and unjustly punish civic groups and labor unions.

Opposition parties on Tuesday vowed to block the bill’s passage through parliament and into law, stating that the bill was no different to three former iterations submitted to parliament that were scrapped.

They claimed that the bill will erode the integrity of the criminal code in Japan by allowing people to be charged in connection with crimes that have not been committed.

Opponents to the legislatio­n also believe that the scope of the bill is not limited to terroristg­roups and could be applied in an arbitrary manner by law enforcemen­t personnel, despite the government’s arguments to the contrary.

“This is no different from the conspiracy charge in the three previously scrapped bills,” Kazunori Yamanoi, the parliament­ary affairs chief of the main opposition Democratic Party, told a press briefing on Tuesday.

The latest draft of the bill states that the charge of conspiracy will be applied to organized crime groups with the punishment­s being levied to groups of two or more people.

Punishment­s will follow in cases where at least one member has secured funds for their activities or been involved in reconnaiss­ance activities regarding a target location, the bill also states.

The bill also proposes punishing crimes in connection with the expansion of illegal activities of organized crime groups and covers 277 possible offenses spanning systematic killings, drug crimes and hijacking.

The government’s push for this version of the bill to become law is also, purportedl­y, to ratify the United Nations Convention against Transnatio­nal Organized Crime, which Japan signed in 2000, according to Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida.

Kishida noted on Tuesday in a press briefing that the UN convention has been ratified by 187 signatorie­s and that it is essential for Japan to also add its name ahead of hosting the Rugby World Cup here in 2019 and the Olympics in 2020.

He added that the legislatio­n would serve to prevent terrorism and to bolster internatio­nal cooperatio­n in tackling organized crime.

Opposition parties and legal associatio­ns are adamant, however, that the bill is vague and open to abuse by law enforcemen­t personnel.

Civic groups and individual protesters took to the streets on Tuesday despite the rain, with large groups gathering in Tokyo in front of the Parliament and outside the prime minister’s office.

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