Los Angeles Times

Japan’s police on alert amid yakuza leadership divide

- By Jake Adelstein Adelstein is a special correspond­ent.

TOKYO — Japan’s largest yakuza group, or crime syndicate, the Yamaguchig­umi, marks its 100th year in business in 2015, but the group’s future looks to be in doubt after two meetings in the last week in the western city of Kobe that apparently have split the organizati­on in two.

Police nationwide have gone on full alert, fearing that the fissure will spark a bloody gang war, as a previous factional divide did in 1984. More than 100 police officers were on duty in the area around the Yamaguchig­umi headquarte­rs in Kobe, according to a senior detective in the Hyogo Prefectura­l Police Department, as well as multiple Japanese news organizati­ons.

Sources with the National Police Agency and Hyogo police expressed concern that the divide could herald further problems. National broadcaste­r NHK reported Saturday that police were attempting to confirm reports that the Yamaguchi-gumi headquarte­rs would be moved to Nagoya.

The senior detective, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to journalist­s, said, “The split may result in a free-for-all in the yakuza world as various factions of the Yamaguchi-gumi and other organized crime groups attempt to seize power and create new alliances in the transition period.”

The Yamaguchi-gumi had more than 23,400 members at the end of 2014, according to the National Police Agency, making the organizati­on the most powerful of 21 such groups on the Japanese government’s watch list.

In Japan, groups such as the Yamaguchi-gumi exist as semi-legal entities engaging in legal as well as illegal businesses. Some run corporatio­ns, real estate agencies and constructi­on companies while also keeping their hand in traditiona­l illicit activities such as blackmail, extortion and fraud.

They also supply labor to nuclear power plants, including cleanup at Fukushima after the devastatin­g 2011 earthquake and tsunami, according to the National Police Agency and other reports.

The yakuza are tolerated to some degree and even admired in some circles.

Atsushi Mizoguchi, a Japanese author who has written two books about the Yamaguchi-gumi, told NHK that one faction of the group, the Yamaken-gumi, which has about 2,000 members, has long been unhappy with the division of prime leadership posts.

“The organizati­on has been essentiall­y divided between two main groups and the opposition became so deep that it finally resulted in the breakup,” he said.

He predicted that the division would not result in the same level of gang violence as a previous split of the Yamaguchi-gumi in the ’80s. But he predicted there would be small skirmishes between the two groups, perhaps continuing for several years.

The Yamaguchi-gumi was founded in 1915 as a temporary labor dispatch service by Harukichi Yamaguchi, a former fisherman. It has grown into an organizati­on so powerful that the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned several of its top members in December 2013 in a crackdown on transconti­nental crime, authorizin­g freezing of their bank accounts and seizure of their assets.

The Kodo-kai faction was singled out in an April 2105 announceme­nt by the Treasury Department: “Among other criminal activities, the Kodo-kai has conducted extortion and engaged in bribery on behalf of the Yamaguchi-gumi and has gained prominence in part for its financial muscle.”

The administra­tion of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been accused of having ties to the Yamaguchi-gumi. Hakubun Shimomura, the minister of education, was the subject of intense scrutiny this year for receiving political donations from a Yamaguchi-gumi front company and political support from a Yamaguchi-gumi Kodo-kai associate. He returned the donations.

The current conflict appears to stem from divided loyalty to the current leader of the organizati­on, Kenichi Shinoda, also known as Tsukasa Shinobu. The 73-yearold is affiliated with the Kodo-kai faction and took over the Yamaguchi-gumi in 2005.

He replaced Yoshinori Watanabe, who represente­d the Yamaken-gumi, the second-most powerful faction in the group. The Yamaguchi-gumi is a pyramid-like organizati­on with 72 directly affiliated gang leaders who head their own crime groups. There has long been interfacti­onal conflict.

The Yamaken-gumi has been resentful of Tsukasa’s reign, feeling that power was not equally divided and that actions taken by the upper management have resulted in increased police crackdowns.

It was not immediatel­y apparent why the split happened now, but there is speculatio­n that it had to do with Tsukasa’s plan to retire this year. His successor was also expected to be from the Kodo-kai faction.

Police sources say that early this month, the Yamaken-gumi united with several other major factions in the Kansai region and split from the organizati­on.

The breakaway faction is reportedly planning to establish its own organizati­on with a new name, police sources said, and the breakaway groups boycotted the meeting Friday at the Kobe headquarte­rs and many of their top bosses were permanentl­y expelled from the organizati­on.

The last major conflict in the Yamaguchi-gumi began in 1984 over a dispute concerning succession. The gang war that followed resulted in more than 25 people killed and 70 injured.

Tsukasa has forbidden the sale and use of drugs and other activities that he deems dishonorab­le. This has spurred resentment among some members who feel deprived of income revenue, according to reports in Japanese media and talks with low-ranking members.

As part of the effort to reestablis­h a modicum of moral rectitude in the organizati­on, he revived the Yamaguchi-gumi’s in-house newspaper and even tacitly approved a website under the title of the Banish Drugs and Purify the Nation League, yakuza fanzines have said.

The English version of the website casts some light on how the group justifies its existence, claiming that it follows what it calls a “chivalrous path.”

‘The split may result in a free-for-all in the yakuza world as various factions of the Yamaguchi-gumi and other organized crime groups attempt to seize power.’

— A senior detective in the Hyogo Prefectura­l

Police Department

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