The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tensions flare in Okinawa ceremony

Japan’s premier heckled on 70th anniversar­y marking end of the bloodiest episode in Pacific War

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ITOMAN, Japan: Japan’s premier Shinzo Abe was heckled Tuesday at a ceremony to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of the Battle of Okinawa, the bloodiest episode in the Pacific War, as anger flared over the US military’s continuing presence.

In a highly charged ceremony on Okinawa, Abe was shouted at by locals angry at the size of the United States’ presence on the subtropica­l islands.

Cries of “Go home!” could be heard as he took the podium.

It is relatively unusual for a Japanese prime minister to be jeered by the public.

Abe, who appeared rattled, told the audience Japan had for decades enjoyed the dividend of peace after the horrors of World War II.

“People in Okinawa have long been asked to carry a big burden for our security,” he said.

“We will continue to do our best to reduce (it).”

Governor Takeshi Onaga was warmly applauded by the 5,000strong crowd after using his speech to denounce ‘the heavy burden’ of American bases in Okinawa, host to more than half of the 47,000 US service personnel in Japan.

“Seventy-three-point-eight per cent of US military facilities (in Japan) are still concentrat­ed in our prefecture, which makes up only 0.6 per cent of the country’s land area,” he said.

The ceremony took place in Itoman, at the southern tip of Okinawa, near the spot where terrified islanders had jumped from cliffs or were pushed to their deaths in June 1945 on the orders of Imperial Army soldiers taught never to surrender.

Thousands of visitors, many of them survivors of the war, filed past black marble monuments inscribed with the names of the fallen, to pray and leave flowers.

More than 100,000 Okinawans and 80,000 Japanese troops died in the 82-day battle for the strategica­lly placed island chain.

“It was innocent civilians who suffered,” survivor Takeko Kakazu, 97, told

People in Okinawa have long been asked to carry a big burden for our security.

AFP. “Seventy years have passed but the cruelty of the war stays with me.”

“We fled south from Naha (the capital of Okinawa), but there were no caves left to hide in,” added Kakazu, who was pregnant at the time and gave birth on an American warship after being caught.

“The bombs kept dropping and we had to hide under trees. It was dreadful.”

Over 12,000 American soldiers also perished in what many had feared was a foretaste of the fight they would have to wage for the Japanese mainland.

That invasion never came, partly because of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, w i t h a cowed Japan surrenderi­ng in August 1945.

Entire families were wiped out and almost everyone on the island lost at least one relative.

As well as those who committed suicide by plunging off cliffs rather than surrender, Americans found thousands more locals dead in caves where they had been hiding to escape the furious US bombardmen­t.

The war anniversar­y comes with feelings running high on Okinawa – a one-time independen­t kingdom annexed by Japan in the 19th century. A controvers­ial plan to move a US air base from a crowded urban area to the rural spot of Henoko on the coast is proving deeply unpopular,

with many wanting it to be put somewhere else altogether.

“We strongly demand that the government cancel constructi­on at Henoko and review its policies of reducing Okinawa’s base burden once again,” Governor Onaga said Tuesday. — AFP

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s Prime Minister

 ??  ?? People pray in front of an altar after a memorial service for those who died in the Battle of Okinawa during World War II at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, in Japan’s southern island of Okinawa prefecture. — AFP photo
People pray in front of an altar after a memorial service for those who died in the Battle of Okinawa during World War II at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, in Japan’s southern island of Okinawa prefecture. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Abe offers flowers for the war dead during a memorial service of the Battle of Okinawa, at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, on Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, in this photo taken by Kyodo, to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of the battle. —...
Abe offers flowers for the war dead during a memorial service of the Battle of Okinawa, at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, on Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, in this photo taken by Kyodo, to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of the battle. —...
 ??  ?? A man (centre) speaks out in protest against Abe during a memorial service to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of the Battle of Okinawa, at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, on Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, in this photo taken by Kyodo. —...
A man (centre) speaks out in protest against Abe during a memorial service to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the end of the Battle of Okinawa, at the Peace Memorial Park in Itoman, on Japan’s southern island of Okinawa, in this photo taken by Kyodo. —...
 ??  ?? Takeshi Onaga
Takeshi Onaga
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