Japan PM's "stealth" constitution plan raises civil rights fears

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Ceewan

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Jul 23, 2008
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(Reuters) - Shinzo Abe makes no secret of wanting to revise Japan's constitution, which was drafted by the United States after World War Two, to formalize the country's right to have a military - but critics say his plans go deeper and could return Japan to its socially conservative, authoritarian past.

Abe, 58, returned to office in December for a second term as prime minister and is enjoying sky-high support on the back of his "Abenomics" recipe for reviving the economy through hyper-easy monetary policy, big spending and structural reform.

Now he is seeking to lower the hurdle for revising the constitution as a prelude to an historic change to its pacifist Article 9 - which, if strictly read, bans any military. That would be a symbolic shift, loosening restrictions on the military's overseas activities, but would have limited impact on defense as the clause has already been stretched to allow Tokyo to build up armed forces that are now bigger than Britain's.

However, sweeping changes proposed by Abe's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in a draft constitution would strike at the heart of the charter with an assault on basic civil rights that could muzzle the media, undermine gender equality and generally open the door to an authoritarian state, activists and scholars say.

RESTRICTIONS, RESTRAINTS

"What I find strange is that although the prime minister is not that old, he is trying to revive the mores of his grandfather's era," said Ryo Motoo, the octogenarian head of the Women's Article 9 Association, a group devoted to protecting the constitution.

"I fear this might lead to a society full of restrictions, one that does not recognize diversity of opinions and puts restraints on the freedom of speech as in the past."

Abe's grandfather Nobusuke Kishi was a pre-World War Two cabinet minister who was arrested but never tried as a war criminal. Kishi served as premier from 1957-60, when he resigned due to a furor over a U.S.-Japan Security Treaty.

Riding high in the opinion polls and buoyed by big stock market gains, Abe has grown more outspoken about his conservative agenda, including revising the constitution and being less apologetic about Japan's wartime past - a stance that has frayed already tense relations with China and South Korea, where memories of Tokyo's past militarism run deep.

Many Japanese conservatives see the constitution, unchanged since its adoption in 1947 during the U.S.-led Allied Occupation, as an embodiment of Western-style, individualistic mores they believe eroded Japan's group-oriented traditions.

RIGHTS VS DUTIES

Critics see Abe's plan to ease requirements for revising the charter and then seek to change Article 9 as a "stealth" strategy that keeps his deeper aims off the public radar.

"The real concern is that a couple of years later, we move to a redefinition of a 'new Japan' as an authoritarian, nationalist order," said Yale University law professor Bruce Ackerman.

The LDP draft, approved by the party last year, would negate the basic concept of universal human rights, which Japanese conservatives argue is a Western notion ill-suited to Japan's traditional culture and values, constitutional scholars say.

"The current constitution ... provides protection for a long list of fundamental rights - freedom of expression, freedom of religion," said Meiji University professor Lawrence Repeta. "It's clear the leaders of the LDP and certain other politicians in Japan ... are passionately against a system that protects individual rights to that degree."

The draft deletes a guarantee of basic human rights and prescribes duties, such as submission to an undefined "public interest and public order". The military would be empowered to maintain that "public order."

One proposal would ban anyone from "improperly" acquiring or using information about individuals - a clause experts say could limit freedom of speech. A reference to respect for the "family" as the basic social unit hints, say critics, at a revival of a patriarchal system that gave women few rights.

"The constitution is there to tie the hands of government, not put duties on the people," said Taro Kono, an LDP lawmaker often at odds with his party on policies. "There are some in both houses (of parliament) who don't really understand the role of a modern constitution."

WRITTEN BY HUMANS

Abe and the LDP say easing the revision procedures would allow voters a bigger say in whether to alter the charter.

"The constitution is not something given by God, it was written by human beings. It should not be frightening to change it so I'd like the people to consider trying it once," Yosuke Isozaki, an aide to Abe, told the Nikkei business daily.

Under Article 96, changes to the constitution must be approved by at least two-thirds of both houses of parliament and then a majority of voters in a national referendum. Abe wants to require a simple majority of lawmakers before a public vote.

With Abe's popularity high and the main opposition splintered, the LDP and smaller pro-revision parties appear to have a shot at winning a two-thirds majority in an upper house election in July. They already hold two-thirds of the lower house.

"It's not as easy as it might appear," said Sophia University political science professor Koichi Nakano. "But for the first time, it's a realistic prospect."

Japan celebrates Constitution Day on Friday.


source:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/01/us-japan-politics-constitution-idUSBRE9400ZT20130501
 

Ceewan

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Jul 23, 2008
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Tokyo protesters say no to amending Constitution

TOKYO (AP) -- Hundreds of Japanese, young and old, gathered in downtown Tokyo in a peaceful protest Friday against calls by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to amend the country's pacifist constitution and give the government more power to abridge civil liberties.

Opposition parties, labor groups, religious organizations and individuals turned out to march from a park near the Imperial Palace through the Ginza shopping district, beating drums and chanting their opposition to such moves by Abe and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Japan was marking the 66th anniversary of its constitution on Friday, a national holiday.

Supporters of amending the constitution want to change the requirement that constitutional amendments win two-thirds approval in both houses of parliament before they are put to a national referendum. They want that changed to simple majority approvals in parliament before a referendum.

Opponents say such changes could allow the government to undermine civil liberties. Reinforcing such concerns is a proposal by the Liberal Democrats that calls for making civil liberties such as freedom of speech and expression subordinate to the public interest.

"The constitution is meant to protect the people and their rights from the government. What they want to do is to reverse that," said Hiroshi Honna, a member of a group of World War II air raid victims' families and of a group against amending Article 9 of the constitution, in which Japan renounces the use of war.

His was among dozens of groups handing out flyers and marching in the "Ginza Parade."

Surveys show mixed opinions among Japanese to revising the constitution, with some media organizations showing a majority in favor while others show the number of those who are undecided at nearly half, with the rest divided about evenly.

While many Japanese favor Abe's calls for a greater sense of patriotism and national pride, many believe their nation's rejection of war and its protection of civil liberties are essential for its prosperity.

The nuclear disaster following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northeastern Japan has likewise left many Japanese wary of allowing the authorities wider powers.

The constitution was written by U.S. officials whose main concern was keeping Japan from rearming soon after World War II. Until recently, discussions of constitutional amendments mainly focused on longtime calls to change Article 9, which keeps a tight rein on Japan's military, known as the "Self-Defense Forces."

Abe took office late last year, vowing to end two decades of economic stagnation and restore Japan's greatness. He has long campaigned for boosting the role of the military, and with his popularity ratings at more than 70 percent appears confident of winning a strong mandate for the Liberal Democrats in a July election for the upper house of parliament.

Among other things, Abe wants Japan to be able to engage in "collective defense," with its troops able to fight alongside Tokyo's allies -- especially the U.S. troops who are obliged to defend Japan -- if either comes under direct attack. The United States has about 50,000 troops in Japan, including its largest air base in Asia.

Right now, if Japan's current standoff with China over a group of disputed islands flared into actual conflict, and U.S. Navy ships coming to Japan's assistance took enemy fire, Japan wouldn't be able to help them.

The prospect of a stronger role for Japan's military causes great unease in neighboring South Korea and China, which endured invasion and occupation by Japanese Imperial forces before and during World War II.

Liberal Democrats and other supporters of constitutional reform contend Tokyo needs greater leeway to cope with China's rising military power.

"China is getting stronger and stronger, and meanwhile our military is confined to a purely defensive posture," Liberal Democratic lawmaker Gen Nakatani said in a Friday television discussion on NHK TV.

Addressing the rally Friday, Mizuho Fukushima, head of the opposition Green Party, urged listeners to lobby against amending the constitution.

"If they can amend the constitution through a simple majority the government will be able to make whatever changes it wants whenever it suits them," she said.

Kazuo Shii of the Japan Communist Party said high requirements for amending the constitution were considered "common sense" in most countries.

"The constitution exists to protect your own rights," he said. "There is a good reason it is not easy to amend it."


source:
http://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20130504p2g00m0dm001000c.html

(mainchi.jp is a great news source for current Japanese news and I highly recommend it)
 
Aug 11, 2012
48
25
Hmmm.. interesting. I personally love Western culture with all my heart and think it's the best there is, but if they want to try things another way more power to them. That being said, I know very little of Japan's domestic affairs and therefore won't comment on that aspect; however, from an international standpoint it seems damn stupid. Taking away rights won't make any friends with the Western world and as the article said, militarization makes nearby countries uneasy. Good job becoming a pariah state, I hope isolationism works out as well as it did last time. Eh, I s'pose internal affairs don't much affect the western world's willingness to conduct business considering trade with China.

EDIT: I was just thinking these changes seem at direct odds with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of which Japan is a signatory. Not that the UN and its documents hold any kind of weight or meaning.
 

Ceewan

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Jul 23, 2008
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Article 96 key in panel's debates

Political parties are set to clarify Thursday their stances on amending Article 96 of the Constitution at a meeting of a House of Representatives panel tasked with studying revisions to the top law.

Article 96 stipulates procedures for revising the Constitution. The panel will have thorough discussions on proposed amendments for each of the 11 chapters.

In debates up until now, many parties advocated adding new rights to the supreme law, such as the right to a healthy environment.

In contrast, opinions vary widely over changing Article 9, which stipulates renunciation of war. Three parties clearly support amending the provision--the Liberal Democratic Party, Nippon Ishin no Kai (Japan Restoration Party) and Your Party--but other parties' views are quite different.

At a symposium held Friday in Tokyo, Gen Nakatani of the LDP emphasized the party will stress the necessity of amending the Constitution to the public through debates in the panel's meetings.


source (see link for much larger article with graph on Article 96 amendments):
http://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0000196694


I try not to editorialize when I share news but the liist of proposed amendments is very interesting and any amendment that passes will likely have radical effects on the Japanese population and their current way of life.
 

Gir633

Señor Member
Oct 28, 2008
556
172
I don't see as big a problem in the individual revisions they are trying to make, as much as in the change in how the constitution can be changed. If they try to make crappy changes to the constitution they "should" get voted down in the nation vote, but if a few lawmakers can start mucking around with it as they see fit, you got problems.
 

Ceewan

Famished
Jul 23, 2008
9,152
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I don't see as big a problem in the individual revisions they are trying to make

Think again:
JN_I130505000078_20130505201258_C.jpg


I will add another quote:
Specifically, inclusions such as the right to privacy and the right to a healthy environment were supported by all parties except the Japanese Communist Party and Your Party. The current Constitution does not expressly stipulate these rights.

Tetsuo Saito, a member of Komeito's Central Secretariat, said, "The new rights should be clearly outlined in the Constitution."
 

cattz

(◣_◢)
Jun 11, 2007
305
5
They want to have their cake and eat it to..

Yeah, nothing could go wrong here..

:sigh:
 

omankohageshiku

New Member
Jul 12, 2010
15
1
LDP forgets one thing when they dream of conquering China again: It is no longer same China it was in 1930`s.
Isolationist politics as in 1630`s - 1850`s did not make Japan stronger.
Will they never learn? Do they want Chinese nukes over them, before realistic thinking kicks in again?
And when non-democratic anti-freedom domestic politics are introduced...LDP & other right-wing voters will be the first moaning out their disappointment, if that will be even allowed.