The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Japan parliament passes controvers­ial anti-terror bill

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TOKYO: Japan’s lower house of parliament yesterday passed a controvers­ial bill to crack down on people planning terrorism and other organised crime, despite concerns it threatens civil rights.

The government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe argues the legislatio­n is necessary to prevent terrorism ahead of the 2020 Olympic Games.

Officials also say it is a prerequisi­te for implementi­ng a UN treaty against Transnatio­nal Organised Crime which Japan signed in 2000.

The more powerful lower house controlled by Abe’s coalition passed the bill, which now goes to the upper house, where the government enjoys a comfortabl­e majority.

If enacted it would allow investigat­ors to charge an individual or organisati­on which conspires to engage in terrorism

We can’t tolerate a surveillan­ce society which can impact civil rights. Japan Federation of Bar Associatio­ns

or other serious crimes.

But rights groups, the national bar associatio­n and numerous academics have strongly opposed the bill, saying it could be abused to allow wiretappin­g of innocent citizens and punish activities protected by the constituti­on.

The bill was revised after earlier versions were scrapped three times over the years due to concerns about content.

The latest bill, approved by Abe’s cabinet in March and sent to lawmakers, reduced the number of targeted crimes to some 270 and narrowed the kinds of groups covered to terrorist and criminal organisati­ons.

Criticism had focused on the more than 600 types of crimes unrelated to terrorism or crime syndicates that were targeted under previous versions.

But despite the latest revision, the bill remains problemati­c as investigat­ive authoritie­s can still decide what constitute­s a criminal organisati­on, the Japan Federation of Bar Associatio­ns said.

The general public can be targeted for conspiracy through monitoring phone and online conversati­ons, it said.

“We can’t tolerate a surveillan­ce society which can impact civil rights,” the associatio­n said in a statement before the lower house passed the measure.

Some Japanese media have likened the bill to the World War II-era ‘public order maintenanc­e law’ under which ordinary people were arrested for political offences, exercising labour rights and antiwar activities. — AFP

 ?? —Reuters photo ?? Protesters shout slogans as they protest against an anti-conspiracy bill outside parliament building in Tokyo.
—Reuters photo Protesters shout slogans as they protest against an anti-conspiracy bill outside parliament building in Tokyo.

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