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International Scholars, Peace Advocates and Artists Condemn Agreement To Build New U.S. Marine Base in Okinawa
un articulo por Peace Philosophy Blogspot
Leading scholars, peace advocates and artists from the United
States, Canada, Europe, and Australia today released the attached
statement opposing the construction of the new U.S. Marine base at
Henoko, Okinawa, planned by the US and Japanese governments as
a replacement facility of Futenma airbase located in the middle of
Ginowan City. Their statement urges “support for the people of
Okinawa in their struggle for peace, dignity, human rights, and
protection of the environment.” PHOTO:Filmmaker Oliver Stone visits elders at Henoko sit-in tent, August 2013
(Photo by Ryukyu Shimpo
click on photo to enlarge
Initial signers of the statement include linguist Noam Chomsky,
academy award winning film makers Oliver Stone and Michael
Moore, Nobel Laureate Mairead Maguire, historian John Dower,
former U.S. military officer and diplomat Ann Wright, and United
Nations Special Rapporteur for Palestine Richard Falk. (See complete
list of initial signers on statement. Additional names are being
added.)
Speaking for the signers, Joseph Gerson of the American Friends
Service Committee, who has worked with Okinawan base opponents
and initiated the 1996 “Statement of Outrage and Remorse”
following the kidnapping and rape of an Okinawan schoolgirl by
U.S. servicemen, said the statement is intended to “ rally
international support for Okinawans in their inspiring and essential
nonviolent campaign to end seventy years of military colonization,
to defend their dignity and human rights, and to ensure peace and
protect their environment.”
Professor Peter Kuznick of American University, who co-authored
The Untold History of the United States with Oliver Stone, decried
Okinawa Governor Hirokazu Nakaima’s betrayal of Okinawan voters.
“During the campaign, Nakaima promised to work for the relocation
of Futenma base outside Okinawa. According to the polls, 72.4
percent of Okinawans see the governor’s decision as a ‘breach of
his election pledge,’” Kuznick said, “The deal was made at the
behest of the United States and of Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe. It tramples the rights of the Okinawan people to advance
Obama’s Asian ‘pivot.’”
The statement reviews the oppression and exploitation of Okinawa-
- first by Japanese rulers with invasion and annexation, and then by
the United States to support its hegemonic interests in the Pacific. It
points to the unjust concentration of 73.8% of exclusively U.S.
military bases in Japan on less than 1% of the country’s land mass.
Signers also point to the painful irony that for seven decades
Okinawans “have suffered what the signers of the U.S. Declaration
of Independence denounced as ‘abuses and usurpations,’ including
the presence of foreign ‘standing armies without consent of our
legislature.’”
Professor Gavan McCormack of the Australian National University,
and co-author with Satoko Norimatsu of Resistant Islands: Okinawa
Confronts Japan and the United States, described the intrusions of
militarism that threaten Okinawans’ lives and health, " from military
accidents, crimes including sexual violence for which U.S. forces are
not held fully accountable, to intolerable military aircraft noise and
chemical pollution.” He said that “Okinawans’ courageous and
unrelenting struggle to finally end the military occupation and to
enjoy real security deserves the support of people around the
world.”
To support the effort, you may sign the petition at Change.org.
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