http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asia/japan/2010/05/17/256830/17000-Japanese.htm
www.ChinaPost.com.tw
17,000 Japanese circle
Monday, May 17, 2010
By Jay Alabaster AP
About 17,000 residents surrounded the Futenma air base early in the afternoon, chanting slogans and completing a human chain twice for several minutes each time, city official Hitoshi Nakou said. The base covers about 1.9 square miles (4.92 square kilometers), and sits in the middle of Ginowan, a city of about 93,000.
Locals from
An agreement to move the base to a less populated part of the island was made in 1996, but Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said he wanted to rework that deal when he came to power last year. Despite campaign pledges to relocate the base, he has repeatedly extended his deadline to present a solution and faces heavy criticism on the issue both at home and abroad.
Hatoyama visited Okinawa earlier this month, apologizing to locals for the "nuisance" caused by the base.
On Sunday, protesters, many dressed in ponchos against the rainy weather, lined up along the barbed-wire fences and city streets on the base perimeter, raising their linked arms and shouting slogans, including "We are against moving the base inside our prefecture (state)."
The demonstration was timed to coincide with the Saturday anniversary of Okinawa's return from
The biggest anti-base protest yet gathered 90,000 Okinawans last month.
Futenma is home to only about 2,000
In the 1996 agreement, made after the brutal rape of a 12-year-old schoolgirl by two Marines and a sailor, the
Separately on Sunday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano, who is visiting
The meeting was immediately criticized by politicians in Tokunoshima, who oppose such a move and said talks should be held with elected officials.
Hatoyama is increasingly caught between locals emboldened by his promises for a new deal with the U.S. and Japan's close military alliance with Washington, which wants him to stick to the original plan. He had promised to come up with a solution by the end of this month, but seems to have backed away from that deadline in recent comments.
His popularity has fallen to the 20-percent level in recent newspaper polls, and one member of his coalition has said it may break away if the issue is not addressed. Editorials in
"Seeing Hatoyama running around in all directions, a great many people must now be unable to believe what he says," read a Friday editorial in the Yomiuri,
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