The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Group gets police footage of Beatles tour after long fight

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Footage taken by police for security purposes during e Beatles’ tour of Japan in 1966 has been released — albeit somewhat censored — by a nonpro t organizati­on advocating greater informatio­n disclosure.

e footage shows the extensive e orts taken by authoritie­s to protect the world-famous band during a tour that had fans giddy with excitement but also sparked criticism that rock concerts were “inappropri­ate” for Nippon Budokan hall in Tokyo.

e Beatles touched down in Japan early on June 29, 1966, and performed ve concerts over three days from June 30 to July 2 at the Budokan. More than 30,000 police o cers were deployed to provide security during the tour.

e released black-and-white footage runs for 35 minutes 40 seconds and has no sound. It includes scenes of lines of uniformed police o cers standing in the Budokan during one concert, and a discussion between o cers and a man sitting in a sound truck adorned with a banner featuring messages, such as one denouncing the English band. Some previously unseen footage includes scenes that appear to be from the band’s concert on July 2.

“U.S. President John F. Kennedy had been assassinat­ed about three years before the Beatles came to perform here,” said Toru Omura, an expert on the band’s visit to Japan. “is footage is a precious record that reveals the Metropolit­an Police Department’s determinat­ion that they wouldn’t let any incidents occur during the tour.”

e existence of the footage was discovered in 2014. Although the Joho Kokai Shimin (Informatio­n disclosure citizens) Center had pressed the MPD to release the footage, parts showing the appearance of people other than the band members — such as security personnel and fans — were edited out due to privacy concerns.

e Nagoya-based center later took the Tokyo metropolit­an government to court in a bid to get the entire footage released, but the Supreme Court upheld the center’s defeats in the lower courts. In July this year, a DVD of the footage was given to the center, with the faces of everyone except e Beatles blurred.

“is informatio­n belongs to the public, and it’s strange that only a few people could see this footage of e Beatles that would be cherished around the world,” said Satoshi Shinkai, a lawyer and chairman of the center. “is footage will be valuable in helping to raise awareness of the signi cance of disclosing informatio­n.”(Sept. 24)

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