The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Freed Japan hostage arrives home to joy, but also anger

-

TOKYO: A Japanese journalist freed from Syria this week arrived home to overjoyed relatives and supporters, but also to vitriol from some who accuse him and other hostages of reckless behaviour.

Jumpei Yasuda was kidnapped in Syria in 2015, and spent more than three years in conditions he described as “hell.”

He arrived back in Japan on Thursday night, greeted by his delighted wife and parents, who had brought him homemade Japanese food to celebrate.

But even before Yasuda set foot on Japanese soil, he was the target of angry criticism – mostly online – ranging from accusation­s of recklessne­ss to claims that he was not even Japanese.

“He is disturbing society,” wrote one Twitter user. “He’s an anticitize­n,” charged another.

Perhaps anticipati­ng the criticism, Yasuda’s only statement upon arrival, read to reporters by his wife Myu, was dominated by an apology.

“I apologise for causing such trouble and worry, but thanks to all of you, I was able to come home safely,” he said.

The anger directed at Yasuda – author of books on the conflicts in Syria and Iraq, whose reporting has appeared on Japanese television – is a far cry from the reception that journalism held hostage have received in other countries upon their release.

When four French journalist­s held by the Islamic State group in Syria were released, then-French president Francois Hollande met the men as they arrived home.

But in Japan, freed hostages have often met a mixed reception, with critics suggesting victims were responsibl­e for getting themselves kidnapped.

“They are the victims, they haven’t broken the law, but they have to apologise. It’s strange, but it’s the mentality of a part of Japanese society,” said Toshiro Terada, a professor of philosophy at Sophia University in Tokyo.

“The person is accused of having harmed society.”

In one of the more shocking examples of the reaction, three Japanese men held hostage in Iraq and freed in 2004 arrived home to find people at the airport holding up banners reading “It’s your fault.”

Their kidnappers had threatened to burn them alive if Tokyo failed to withdraw non-combat troops stationed in southern Iraq.

But then-prime minister Junichiro Koizumi refused the demands, and even declined to meet with the families of the hostages, a hardline position that was applauded in some quarters of Japanese society. The government itself, supported by right-wing media, described the men as ‘irresponsi­ble youths’ for having ignored warnings to avoid travel to Iraq, then an active war zone.

One of the men, Noriaki Imai, said recently he received letters saying ‘die’ or calling him ‘stupid’.

“Online, the bashing lasted ten years,” he said.

Yasuda has faced similar criticism for venturing to Syria, a country where several Japanese citizens were kidnapped and eventually executed.

Compoundin­g the antagonism is the fact that Yasuda was kidnapped once before, in Iraq in 2004, prompting some to describe him as a “profession­al hostage.”

And detractors have claimed Yasuda is not even Japanese, partly as the result of a bizarre hostage video showing him and another captive in Syria that emerged in August.

Despite speaking Japanese, he identified himself as a South Korean called ‘Omar’, apparently after his kidnappers banned him from revealing his identity or nationalit­y. — AFP

 ??  ?? Yasuda (front, right) poses with his wife Myu (front, left) and his parents Sachiko (back, left) and Hideaki upon his arrival at Narita Airport, in Chiba Prefecture. — AFP photos
Yasuda (front, right) poses with his wife Myu (front, left) and his parents Sachiko (back, left) and Hideaki upon his arrival at Narita Airport, in Chiba Prefecture. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? File photo courtesy of SITE Intelligen­ce Group shows Yasuda appealing for his release as two armed men stand behind him at an unknown location in Syria.
File photo courtesy of SITE Intelligen­ce Group shows Yasuda appealing for his release as two armed men stand behind him at an unknown location in Syria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia