BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18738167
SEQUENCE:18842760
CREATED:20130608T212200Z
DESCRIPTION:A rally will be held at the San Francico Japanese Consulate demanding the 
 immediate removal of Osaka's mayor Toru Hashimoto. Hashimoto defended the 
 use of sexual slaves by the Japanese military during the 2nd WW and also 
 the use of prostitutes in the US bases in Okinawa to prevent rapes. He has 
 also supported the continued operation of nuclear plants and the arrest of 
 anti-nuclear activists in Osaka. The militarization and continued support 
 for restarting Japan's 50 nuclear plants is a threat not only to the 
 Japanese people but to the world. The continued release of radioactive 
 material at Fukushima and the  thousands of gallons of contaminated water 
 continues to leak into the land and the ocean.\n\nWe must act now to stop 
 the restart of the plants. The victory in the battle to close the SCE San 
 Onofre Nuclear Power plant shows that people can have an affect to shut 
 these dangerous plants down.\n\n\n6/11 Japan Consulate Action-Osaka Mayor 
 Hashimoto Out-Keep The Nukes Shut And Stop Repressing Anti-Nuke 
 Activists\nTuesday June 11, 2013 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM\nSan Francisco Japanese 
 Consulate\n50 Fremont St./Mission\nSan Francisco\n\nThe recent comments of 
 Osaka mayor Toru Hashimoto that the sexual slaves from Korea and other 
 countries of Asia  for the Japanese imperial army and navy were necessary 
 to maintain good discipline among the troops, and that prostitution was 
 justifiable for the US military in Okinawa as a means to avoid rapes, are 
 despicable and we condemn them.\n       These statements, however, do not 
 come in a vacuum. The Japanese government and the Abe administration are 
 seeking to eliminate Article  9, the anti-war clause in the Japanese 
 constitution, and to remilitarize the country. While trying to whip up 
 nationalist war hysteria, they have fired teachers who refuse to stand and 
 sing the national imperial anthem at school assemblies. \n    Hashimoto has 
 also supported the jailing in Osaka of anti-war and anti-nuclear activists 
 activists who are opposing the central government’s plan to burn nuclear 
 rubble in all of the prefectures of Japan.\n     The US government is 
 protesting Hashimoto’s remarks regarding the organized enslavement of 
 ‘comfort women’ during WWII. However, the US government is also urging 
 Japan to eliminate the anti-war clause in its constitution, to restart 50 
 closed nuclear power plants, and it is aggressively negotiating to ensure 
 the continued presence and expansion of US military bases in Okinawa and 
 other parts of Japan.\n     We believe that our government’s statements 
 condemning Hashimoto’s remarks about sexual slavery are duplicitous and 
 hypocritical. US policies are actually encouraging the politics of 
 militarization and attacks on human rights by the Japanese government and 
 politicians like Hashimoto.\n    We demand the resignation of Hashimoto as 
 Mayor of Osaka, an end to the repression of anti-nuclear activists, and we 
 stand in opposition to the removal or weakening of Article 9. We also call 
 for the removal of all US bases in Okinawa and Japan. These bases continue 
 to cause grievous harm to Japanese women in particular. Japan’s ecology 
 and all of its people are continually threatened by the toxic load of the 
 American military presence.\n    It is time for action by people of the US 
 and Japan to end to the statements of Mayor Hashimoto, and the actions 
 behind them.\n\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\n\nThe San Francisco - 
 Osaka Sister City Association Disassociates Itself From Statements of Osaka 
 Mayor Toru Hashimoto\nOn the Osaka Mayor Hashimoto's Recent 
 Statement\nhttp://www.sf-osaka.org/modules/reports/\nThe San Francisco - 
 Osaka Sister City Association would like to make clear that the recent 
 statement by Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto to justify the sex slavery system 
 imposed by the Japanese military during World War II as a necessity of war 
 in no way reflects the position of the Association, nor the spirit of the 
 sister city relationship.\nThe San Francisco - Osaka sister city 
 relationship was forged from the ashes of World War II as an historic 
 effort to improve relations between the United States and Japan. Statements 
 that justify controversial wartime abuses and devastating violence against 
 women are damaging to international relations, and contrary to the mission 
 of the Association. We urge proactive efforts by Mayor Hashimoto to address 
 the negative impacts of his damaging statement.\n\nJapan mayor Toru 
 Hashimoto: Wartime prostitution was 
 necessary\nhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=6_LMk8jmd2s\nJapan 
 mayor: Wartime prostitution was necessary\nPublished on May 14, 2013\nA 
 leading Japanese politician has called the use of sex slaves by Japanese 
 soldiers during world war two a "necessary system". \nToru Hashimoto, the 
 Osaka mayor, made the reference to about 200,000 women, mostly Korean and 
 Chinese, who were believed to have been coerced into becoming so-called 
 comfort women. \nHis comments have provoked reactions from others in Japan, 
 and the region.\nAl Jazeera's Harry Fawcett reports from 
 Seoul.\n\n\n\nMayor Osaka Hashimoto 
 Quotes\nhttp://christythomas.com/2013/05/15/japanese-sex-slaves-and-the-nature-of-truth/\n“To 
 maintain discipline in the military, it must have been necessary at that 
 time,” Hashimoto said. “For soldiers who risked their lives in 
 circumstances where bullets are flying around like rain and wind, if you 
 want them to get some rest, a comfort women system was necessary. That’s 
 clear to 
 anyone.”\n\nhttp://www.japantoday.com/category/kuchikomi/view/hashimotos-party-faces-extinction-some-media-say\nBut 
 he was not done yet. That same evening he spoke of a recent visit he’d 
 made to Okinawa, in the course of which, he said, he urged American troops 
 stationed there to make more use of local sex services. “Otherwise,” he 
 said he said, “brave Marines won’t be able to control their sexual 
 energy.”\n\n\nWomen’s Blood Boiling!—400 People Gather to Protest 
 against 
 Hashimoto\nhttp://labornetjp.blogspot.com/2013/06/womens-blood-boiling400-people-gather.html\n\n\nThe 
 hall in the upper house was filled with people, later flooding out to the 
 hallway. People were standing in the back, and those who could not enter 
 the hall listened to presentations in the hallway. The protest action 
 against Hashimoto’s comment on May 22 had about 400 angry people, more 
 than 90 percent of whom were women. “We cann’t ever forgive him,” 
 “He should resign right now,” “Hashimoto and Abe are the same” etc 
 etc… anger never stopped. Some 235 groups raised their voice against 
 Hashimoto’s repeated comments such as “comfort women were necessary” 
 and “the US military should make good use of sex industry to relieve 
 Marine’s sexual energy.” There were media organizations covering this 
 event from Hong Kong and South Korea besides domestic media. Labornet TV 
 live-streamed the event from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.  
 \n\n女たちの怒り沸騰！～「橋下発言に抗議する緊急院内集会」に400人\n参 
 院議員会館講堂が埋まった！あふれた！ 
 会場は立ち見になり、入場できない人たちが会館の外にも並んだ。5月22日午後3時から開催された「女性の人権を尊重する政治を！橋下発言に抗議する緊急 
 院内集会」には、約400人が詰めかけた。9割以上が女性。「絶対許せない」「すぐにヤメロ」「橋下と安倍は一緒」、怒りの声は止まらない。戦時中は「慰 
 安婦制度が必要なのは誰だってわかる」「海兵隊の性的エネルギーを解消するためにもっと風俗業を活用するよう進言した」など、たびかさなる橋下の暴言に、 
 235団体が抗議の声をあげた。メディアも国内だけでなく、香港・韓国からも取材が入った。レイバーネットTVでは、午後2時半～午後5時まで、熱気にあ 
 ふれた集会の模様を生中継した。\n\nGo fight City Hall: People 
 opposing Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto's remarks about the wartime 'comfort 
 women' hold up signs saying 'Don't forgive Hashimoto's discrimination 
 toward women' during a Friday rally in front of Osaka City Hall. | 
 KYODO\nhttp://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/05/25/national/hashimoto-in-unprecedented-crisis/#.UaA_nY6hDzI\nNATIONAL 
 / POLITICS | ANALYSIS\nHashimoto in unprecedented crisis\n'Comfort women' 
 outrage in U.S. also warning to Abe?\nBY ERIC JOHNSTON\nSTAFF WRITER\n	• 
 MAY 25, 2013\nOSAKA – The list of those in and out of Japan, but 
 especially in the United States, who scorn and deride Osaka Mayor and 
 Nippon Ishin no Kai (Japan Restoration Party) coleader Toru Hashimoto for 
 his justification for the wartime “comfort women” is growing daily, 
 presenting a unprecedented crisis for the once-popular 
 politician.\n\nHashimoto’s remarks that the sexual slavery system had 
 been necessary during the war and that U.S. service members in Okinawa 
 should spend more time at paid sex establishments to prevent indecent 
 assaults against local women are being decried by increasing numbers of 
 Americans.\n\nHowever, those in the U.S. who follow bilateral relations — 
 as well as Hashimoto’s supporters — say he is only a convenient 
 whipping boy and the real source of American wrath is actually Prime 
 Minister Shinzo Abe and his Cabinet.\n\nSince May 13, when Hashimoto 
 uttered his remarks, the U.S. State and Defense departments, congressional 
 representatives, the city of San Francisco, and a former U.S. ambassador to 
 Japan have all issued statements of condemnation.\n\nIn the U.S. Congress, 
 Democratic Rep. Mike Honda, who led a 2007 congressional resolution that 
 criticized Japan, and, indirectly, then-Prime Minister Abe, over its stance 
 on the comfort women and called for a formal apology, said Hashimoto’s 
 comments were “repulsive.”\n\n“His view is an affront to history, 
 humanity, and most of all to the young women who were coerced into horrific 
 psychological, physical, emotional and sexual violence, including gang 
 rape, forced abortion, humiliation and mutilation,” Honda said last 
 week.\n\nBut American concern over Japan’s politicians discussing the 
 comfort women issue predates Hashimoto’s remarks.\n\nFormer U.S. 
 Ambassador to Japan Thomas Schieffer told an audience in Washington before 
 Hashimoto made his remarks that he was concerned about suggestions from the 
 Abe government that it wanted to revisit the 1993 Kono Statement. That 
 declaration said the Japanese military was, directly or indirectly, 
 involved in the establishment and management of brothels across Asia for 
 its troops and the transfer of comfort women to work in them.\n\n“There 
 is no constituency in the U.S. for a position that says, ‘boys will be 
 boys.’ To revisit the Kono Statement would, in my judgment, do great harm 
 to Japan’s interests in the U.S. and throughout the rest of Asia,” 
 Schieffer said in reference to remarks Abe made in recent months suggesting 
 he didn’t quite agree with the 1993 direct apology to the sex slaves 
 issued by then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono.\n\nMindy Kotler, 
 director of the Washington-based Asia Policy Point and one of those 
 involved in the drafting of a 2007 congressional comfort women resolution, 
 said the reaction in Washington was more one of embarrassment at 
 Hashimoto’s comments than alarm.\n\n“Yes, criticism of Hashimoto is a 
 comfortable way to criticize Abe. But Japan-watchers in Washington take the 
 same position as their Liberal Democratic Party friends,” she said, 
 referring to Abe’s ruling party. “Hashimoto is an outsider, literally. 
 He is not someone who can be taken seriously.\n\n“However, they are all 
 concerned that Abe is getting a bit more strident than they would like. 
 They, along with the State and Defense departments, have been sending 
 messages that Abe should tone it down and also not go to (war-linked) 
 Yasukuni Shrine,” Kotler added.\n\nAs to Hashimoto’s comments regarding 
 sex establishments and U.S. forces in Okinawa, what he did was to open a 
 Pandora’s Box on a matter that had long been taboo among those in Tokyo 
 and Washington who deal with the security alliance: that of prostitution 
 and sexual violence in communities near U.S. military bases.\n\nBut 
 combined with his comfort women comments, Hashimoto’s Okinawa remarks in 
 many quarters were interpreted, legitimately or not, as advocating a 
 modern-day comfort women system in the prefecture.\n\n“What U.S. 
 servicemen did and do on Okinawa is no surprise and there is no shock value 
 in bringing it up. However, there is a difference between free enterprise 
 prostitution and state-organized sex slavery,” Kotler said.\n\nJapan 
 Osaka Racist Sexist Reactionary Mayor to meet with former 'comfort women' 
 and meeting in June with SF Mayor Ed Lee\n"a U.S. official in Japan hinted 
 Hashimoto could find himself an unwanted 
 guest."\n\nhttp://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/05/17/national/hashimoto-stays-in-the-hot-seat/#.UZXCTo6hDzI\nHashimoto 
 stays in the hot seat\nBY ERIC JOHNSTON\nSTAFF WRITER\n	• MAY 17, 
 2013\nOSAKA – International condemnation of Osaka Mayor Toru 
 Hashimoto’s comment that the wartime sex slavery system was necessary 
 continued Thursday, with the United States calling the mayor and Nippon 
 Ishin no Kai (Japan Restoration Party) coleader’s remarks outrageous and 
 offensive.\n\nMeanwhile, the city of Osaka announced Hashimoto would meet 
 with two Korean former “comfort women” next week in a bid to defuse the 
 situation.\n\nNext month, Hashimoto plans to travel to San Francisco, where 
 he is scheduled to meet with Edwin Lee, the city’s first Asian-American 
 mayor and the former director of its human rights commission. After that, 
 Hashimoto plans to visit New York to meet with Mayor Michael 
 Bloomberg.\n\nBut a U.S. official in Japan hinted Hashimoto could find 
 himself an unwanted guest.\n\n“As the U.S. has previously stated, what 
 happened in that era to these women who were trafficked for sexual purposes 
 is deplorable, and a grave human rights violation of enormous 
 proportions,” the official said. “We understand Hashimoto is planning 
 to travel to the U.S. We are not sure that anybody will want to meet 
 him.”\n\nHashimoto will have a public meeting with the two former sex 
 slaves on May 24 at City Hall.\n\nThe event was hastily arranged under 
 tremendous pressure by members of Hashimoto’s own party and others in 
 City Hall out of fear the controversy is damaging Osaka’s domestic and 
 international reputation.\n\nAt the national political level, the fallout 
 is affecting Nippon Ishin’s relations with key ally Your Party, which has 
 been scrambling to reassure voters that its views on history, at least, are 
 different from Hashimoto’s.\n\nYour Party was planning to cooperate with 
 Nippon Ishin in the upcoming Upper House election.\n\nOn Wednesday evening, 
 however, Your Party leader Yoshimi Watanabe told reporters his party might 
 end its election cooperation agreement.\n\n“If Hashimoto’s historical 
 views are the same views as his party, we’ll review our relationship,” 
 Watanabe said.\n\nNew Komeito, which cooperates with Hashimoto’s local 
 group, Osaka Ishin no Kai (One Osaka), in the municipal assembly, where 
 they form the ruling coalition, is also furious.\n\nNew Komeito leader 
 Natsuo Yamaguchi, in his email magazine Wednesday, called Nippon Ishin, 
 with its coleaders Hashimoto and Shintaro Ishihara, who believe the sex 
 slave system was necessary, a “reckless political party.”\n\n“The 
 good sense of the voters will flatly reject a party with these kinds of 
 leaders,” he said.\n\nAs criticism continues, Hashimoto went on 
 television Thursday to say it was inappropriate that he suggested the U.S. 
 military in Okinawa should make more use of the legal sex industry as a way 
 to curb servicemen’s sexual impulses.\n\n“My way of expressing myself 
 was poor. I talked about legal establishments, which didn’t mean I was 
 promoting prostitution,” he said. “My understanding of America’s sex 
 industry culture was insufficient. In America, if you say ‘sex 
 industry,’ people immediately think of prostitution. . . . What I wanted 
 to say was that I wanted to control sex crimes in Okinawa with a real 
 argument,” he said, adding that he lacked “international 
 awareness.”\n\nBut he stuck to his basic stance that the comfort women 
 system had been necessary during the war and said international debate on 
 the issue is important.\n\n“If you get angry at the opposite reactions 
 and don’t proclaim your views, then you can’t connect with people 
 around the world,” Hashimoto said.\n\nHe told reporters Thursday evening 
 he agrees with the Nippon Ishin Diet group that his comments regarding sex 
 establishments in Okinawa were inappropriate. However, he also urged the 
 U.S. to think about not just the human rights of the comfort women, but 
 also the rights of people living near U.S. bases in the prefecture.\n\nHe 
 also admitted his remarks would likely negatively affect his U.S. trip in 
 June and some Americans may choose not to meet him. But he added that if 
 U.S. human rights groups ask to meet him and discuss his comments, he 
 would.\n\nOsaka mayor sticks to noxious comments on comfort 
 women\nhttp://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/589315.html\nPosted 
 on : May.28,2013 06:14 KST\n	• \n프린트\n\n\n\nJapanese women cry as 
 they listen to testimonies from two South Korean former comfort women at 
 the Nara Human Rights Center in Japan, May 26. The two women are currently 
 touring Japan, providing public testimony of their experiences. (by Lee 
 Jeong-ah, staff photographer)　\nProminent politician Toru Hashimoto did 
 retract controversial comments on soldiers and brothels in Japan\nBy Jeong 
 Nam-ku, Tokyo correspondent\nToru Hashimoto, Mayor of Osaka and co-leader 
 of the Japan Restoration Party, took back his suggestion that US military 
 forces in Japan make use of houses of prostitution. However, he did not 
 retract his rash remarks that the so-called comfort women, or women who 
 were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese, were necessary during 
 wartime.\nAccording to Japanese media reports released on May 26, Hashimoto 
 appeared on TV on May 25 where he apologized to the US and to the American 
 people for his remarks and expressed his desire to retract them. Early in 
 May, the Japanese politician had suggested to the commander of the US 
 Marine Corps Air Station Futenma on Okinawa that US soldiers could 
 patronize brothels to satisfy their sexual desires.\nHashimoto also 
 apologized for the controversy that the remarks in question had caused and 
 indicated his desire to retract them at a May 25 meeting of the leadership 
 of the Japan Restoration Party in Tokyo.\nMaking reference to the frequent 
 sexual assaults on female soldiers occurring inside the US military and the 
 sexual crimes committed by US soldiers in Okinawa, Hashimoto explained that 
 he had made the remarks in an effort to make the point that it was 
 necessary to work hard to eliminate sexual crimes.\nHashimoto has yet to 
 retract the offensive remarks made at a press conference on May 13 that 
 comfort women were necessary for soldiers during the war. Remarking that he 
 was resigned to being criticized for his controversial remarks about 
 comfort women, Hashimoto reiterated the same position. “Japan is not the 
 only country that should be criticized,” he said. “Instead, we need to 
 turn our attention to the history of every country that has used women on 
 the battlefield.”\nThe Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan has 
 invited Hashimoto to hold a press conference on May 27, where he is 
 planning to explain his remarks.\nOn May 26, the Tokyo Shimbun reported 
 that the leadership of the Japan Restoration Party is worried that, if 
 Hashimoto’s remarks are taken to mean that the party is moving further 
 toward the right, it may well mean the end of the party.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/06/08/18738167.php
SUMMARY:Japan Consulate Action-Osaka Mayor Hashimoto Out-Keep The Nukes Shut And Stop Repress
LOCATION:6/11 Japan Consulate Action-Osaka Mayor Hashimoto Out-Keep The Nukes Shut 
 And Stop Repressing Anti-Nuke Activists\nTuesday June 11, 2013 3:00 PM - 
 5:00 PM\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate\n50 Fremont St./Mission\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/06/08/18738167.php
DTSTART:20130609T124400Z
DTEND:20130609T124400Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
