The Scotsman

Takeshi Onaga

Japanese governor who led opposition to US military bases

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Okinawa Governor Takeshi Onaga, who led opposition to US military bases on the southern Japanese island, has died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 67

He underwent surgery for the cancer in April and resumed work in May. Onaga had said he was determined to fulfil his duties and live up to the expectatio­ns of Okinawans who supported his fight against a US military base relocation plan and the heavy American troop presence on the small island.

Onaga was born in 1950 in the prefectura­l capital, Naha, when Okinawa was still under US occupation after the Second World War.

He was elected in November 2014 on a pledge to scrap plans to relocate a US Marine Corp air station to a less densely populated part of the island and close the air station instead. Opponents of the relocation plan say it only shifts the burden and the base should be moved off the island entirely.

Onaga often confronted top officials of the central government, saying Tokyo’s approach was high-handed and neglected the will of Okinawans. In 2015, four months after taking office, Onaga criticised Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga for “looking down on” Okinawans, citing Suga’s comment that the government planned to steadfastl­y go ahead with the relocation plan.

About half of the 50,000 American troops in Japan are stationed on Okinawa.

Onaga filed a series of lawsuits against the central government, seeking a court injunction to stop landfill at the planned relocation site. He was preparing another legal action when he died.

Onaga has said the Futenma base problem dates to the US confiscati­on of Okinawan land after Japan’s Second World War defeat.

He said Tokyo’s post-war defense stance under the Japan-us security alliance is built on Okinawa’s sacrifice.

The dispute over the Futenma relocation reflects centuries-old tensions between Okinawa and the Japanese mainland, which annexed the islands, formerly the independen­t kingdom of the Ryukus, in 1878. In the final days of the Second World War, Okinawa became Japan’s only home battlegrou­nd, and the island remained under US rule for 20 years longer than the rest of Japan.

MARI YAMAGUCHI

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