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DESCRIPTION:     Stop Illegal Deportation of Kurdish Refugees In Japan  Defend Kurdish 
 and Iranian Refugees In Japan  Emergency Protest Picket  Thursday February 
 3, 2005 3:00-4:30 PM  Japanese Consulate San Francisco  50 Fremont 
 St./Mission St. San Francisco  California, USA             At the same time 
 that the Koizumi government is violating the Japanese Constitution Clause 9 
 by sending troops to Iraq to supposedly  "protect freedom",  it is 
 illegally deporting Kurdish political refugees in Japan back to Turkey. On 
 Tuesday January 18, Kurdish refugees Ahmet Kazankiran and his son, Ramazan, 
 were literally pushed on a plane and deported from Japan despite the fact 
 that Japan is a signatory country the U.N. Convention Relating To The 
 Status of Refugees. The rest of their family and other refugees are also 
 threatened with deportations. The office of the U.N. High Commissioner for 
 Refugees has described the deportations as "contrary to Japan's obligations 
 under international law" and said it contradicts the humanitarian aid Japan 
 extends to refugees  and disaster survivors abroad. 
 http://www.unhcr.or.jp/news/press/pdf/pr050118_e.pdf  
 http://www.unhcr.ch/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home?page=PROTECT&id=3c0762ea4  It 
 seems the Japanese "war government" of Koizumi while it illegally is 
 sending troops to Iraq to carry out the wishes of the Bush administration   
 has little concern about violating the rights of Kurdish immigrants who are 
 subject to persecution in Turkey for supporting the independence of 
 Kurdistan.  Kazankiran came to Japan after he took part in a campaign 
 seeking  Kurdish independence in Turkey. He and his son held a sit-in 
 protest in  front of the United Nations University in Tokyo last year after 
 Japan  refused to grant him refugee status.   The Koizumi government is 
 also seeking to illegally militarize the country and repress all democratic 
 and labor rights. Teachers in Tokyo are now being suspended and fired for 
 refusing to sing nationalist pro-war songs. The government has also passed 
 so called  "anti-terrorism" laws modeled on the US "Patriot Act" 
 legislation that  is now being used to harass and illegally arrest trade 
 unionists and other anti-war activists in Japan.   Recently the Japanese  
 police arrested union  TAKE Ken'ichi, President of Kan-Nama, TAKEYA Shingo, 
  Executive Board Member of Kan-Nama of the(Solidarity Union of Japan 
 Construction and Transport Workers Kansai Area Branch)  and carried out an  
 raid on the  union headquarters and 30  union members' homes in Osaka.  
 http://www.labournet.net/world/0501/japan1.html  The Koizumi government is 
 also attempting to censor the news.  Minister of Economy, Trade and 
 Industry Shoichi Nakagawa and former  Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe 
 have sought to censor NHK producers from exposing the use of "comfort 
 women" by the Japanese government. They want to cleanse  their government's 
  previous war crimes so they can get on with carrying out the 
 militarization of Japan.   We demand that all deportations of refugees and 
 immigrants in Japan be halted. We call on the Japanese people to 
 investigate the violation of refugee and democratic rights by the Koizumi 
 government and to call for the resignation of this government for continual 
 violation of all democratic, labor and refugee rights.   Please send 
 letters of protest to the Consulate General in SF at 50 Fremont St. SF and 
 the press in Japan  In San Francisco, the consulate phone number is 
 (415)777-3533  To Fax or Email Japan  Japanese Ministry of Justice  FAX: 03 
 - 3592 - 7393 e-mail: Webmaster@moj.go.jp  Tokyo entry Bureau of 
 Administrative Services (Shinagawa) retreat  execution section   Telephone: 
 03 - 5796 - 7122 (direct)  FAX: 03 - 5796 - 7125  Japan Support Group For 
 The Kazankiran Family http://homepage3.nifty.com/kds/               
 US-Japan Coalition To Protest the Illegal Deportation of Kurdish Refugees 
 In Japan And For The Defense Of Democratic Rights                Endorsed 
 by  (initial list)  Middle East Radio Project (MERP), Jack Heyman, ILWU 
 Exeuctive Board Member, Labor Action Coalition, American Kurdish 
 Information Network, Attorney Karen Parker, Peace And Freedom Party San 
 Francisco, Carl Bryant NALC 214        For Information contact 
 drpeacess@yahoo.com 925-327-0001   
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
  http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20050126a2.htm  Five 
 Kurdish refugees may be sent to a third country  By MASAMI ITO  Staff 
 writer  Japan might send five United Nations-recognized Kurdish 
 asylum-seekers   to a third country after it deported two members of the 
 family back to   Turkey last week, Justice Minister Chieko Noono said 
 Tuesday.  At a morning news conference following the day's Cabinet meeting, 
 the   minister said she thought it was "natural" to consider the idea.  The 
 Immigration Bureau deported 49-year-old Ahmet Kazankiran and his son   
 Ramazan, 21, to Turkey on Jan. 18. But on Monday, it extended the   
 provisional releases of the remaining five family members.  Noono said the 
 bureau's decision Monday was made based on humanitarian   grounds, 
 including the fact that there were underage children involved.  In an 
 unusual move later Tuesday, the Justice Ministry made public a   written 
 statement sent to the Japan office of the U.N. High Commissioner   for 
 Refugees, in which it presented its counter-argument to the U.N.   body's 
 criticism of the father and son's deportation.  On the day the two men were 
 deported, the UNHCR slammed the action as   going against Tokyo's 
 obligations under international law.  In the statement, the ministry says 
 that ever since the Kazankirans were   recognized as "mandate refugees" by 
 the UNHCR, it has repeatedly told   the body it would be willing to 
 cooperate if the organization was   planning to send the family to a third 
 country.  But the UNHCR repeatedly said that having the family resettle in 
 a third   country was extremely difficult and only continued to ask the 
 ministry   to give the family special residence permits, according to the 
 ministry   statement.  The ministry also said that it would "use this 
 opportunity to tell the   UNHCR that the ministry is prepared to cooperate 
 if the UNHCR is   planning on immediately sending other 'mandate refugees' 
 to a third   country."  UNHCR officials declined to comment on the 
 ministry's statement.  The Kazankirans, for their part, indicated that they 
 have all but given   up their hope of living in Japan as refugees.  "We 
 want to move to a third country, not just the five of us, but   together 
 with my father and brother," Kazankiran's 18-year-old son,   Mustafa, said. 
  "We were recognized as refugees by the U.N., but the Japanese government   
 deported my father and brother," he told The Japan Times. "We cannot   live 
 in a country that does not obey (international) law."  
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
  Shame on the Koizumi Government!   by Reza Fiyouzat   The Japanese Prime 
 Minister has brought his nation to a new low in the realm of international 
 relations. Even as the Koizumi government lobbies nation after nation to 
 support   Japan's bid for a permanent seat at the UN Security Council, the 
 Japanese immigration authorities on Tuesday, January 18, summarily deported 
 two Kurdish refugees from Turkey back to that country.   According to 
 Indymedia Japan of January 18, 2005, „A Kurdish father and his son, who 
 are recognized as mandate refugees by UNHCR, were today deported to Turkey 
 from Narita Airport near Tokyo, at 14:25 (Japan time), in spite of the 
 possibility of threats to their lives in Turkey.‰   „Cries and screams 
 broke out in a room at the Tokyo Bar Association as the message came 
 through that Ahmet Kazankiran, 48, and his eldest son, Ramazan, 20, had 
 been forced onto the plane. The news was received during a press conference 
 held by the remaining members of the deportees' family and another Kurd 
 family facing deportation, and supporters and one of their lawyers,‰ 
 reported The Japan Times, Jan 19, 2005.   The lawyer for the family, 
 Takeshi Ohashi, said, „It is extremely rare for anyone to be deported so 
 soon after detention,‰ (The Japan Times online, Jan 19, 2005). The 
 article characterized the proceedings by the Justice Ministry as, „Acting 
 with uncharacteristic speed.‰ According to the newspaper, on Monday 
 morning the father and son went to the Immigration Bureau in Tokyo to apply 
 for an extension of their status as refugees. Instead of any such 
 extension, „Before noon, it was announced that the two were being 
 detained. The next day, they were deported.‰   More disturbing is the 
 fact that the government did not even feel the compulsion to postpone such 
 a ghastly act of cruelty in the light of the revelations of yet another 
 national scandal, this one to do with officials of the ruling Liberal 
 Democratic Party putting pressure on the producers of a 2001 court-drama 
 aired by NHK (national TV), depicting a mock trial in relation to the sex 
 slaves held by the Japanese Imperial Army before and during World War II, 
 allegedly to assure a balanced treatment‚ of the topic in the TV program; 
 meaning, cut out any meaningful criticism of the Japanese government.   And 
 in true weasel fashion, stiff-necked bureaucrats conveniently hid behind 
 handy technicalities. The Justice Ministry was quick to point out that a 
 UNHCR decree of persons as „mandate refugees‰ does not legally bind a 
 government from deporting them. Accordingly, such status is a mere 
 suggestion, if you will.   „By deporting Ahmet and Ramazan, the Justice 
 Ministry has defied the U.N.'s position on the matter,‰ lawyer Ohashi 
 said. Mr. Ohashi, of course, must maintain legal decorum, and that is the 
 reason for his undeservedly polite choice of words. A more apt choice would 
 have been, „By deporting Ahmet and Ramazan, the Justice Ministry has told 
 lesser peoples to go fuck themselves!‰   This refusal of the extension of 
 stay, and summary and forceful deportation of people officially classified 
 as „mandate refugees‰ by the United Nations High Commissioner for 
 Refugees is an extremely rare first for any so-called First World 
 government, and proves the depth of wickedness and lack of compassion by 
 this cold-hearted Koizumi government. As reported by The Japan Times of Jan 
 19, „The UNHCR senior legal officer Nathalie Karsenty said she had never 
 heard of anyone being deported to their home country after being 
 acknowledged as mandate refugees by the U.N.‰   This episode of 
 forcefully and summarily pushing (literally) a father and son onto an 
 airplane and sending them to a country from which they had run away in fear 
 of their lives is a flagrant abuse of human rights. Further, it clearly 
 proves that the Japanese government under Prime Minister Koizumi is not 
 even willing to observe the most rudimentary protocols of the international 
 body at the helm of which Japan wishes to be seated permanently.   Those 
 deported are two of the Kurdish asylum seekers who last year carried out a 
 campaign of sit-ins for weeks in front of the UN University in Tokyo and 
 were later relocated to Tokyo Detention Center of the immigration 
 authorities. They were later released conditionally, while their cases were 
 being reviewed.   Supporters of the deported Kurdish refugees and human 
 rights NGOs that have assisted asylum seekers in Japan are now calling for 
 actions against this decision by the Japanese   Justice Ministry. They are 
 also calling for boycotts of Turkish products as well as tourist trips to 
 that country until the lives of the deported refugees are confirmed to be 
 safe. The Japanese government has proved, if any proof were needed, that it 
 is one of the most cold-hearted governments among the so-called First World 
 nations.   Under section A, The obligation of non-refoulement, of chapter 
 II, SECURITY AND THE CONVENTION, in the 2001 Note on International 
 Protection  , On the 1951 Refugee Convention (The General Assembly meeting 
 of 13 September 2001, EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER‚S 
 PROGRAMME, Fifty-second session), we find the following with regards to 
 refugees, whose status is as yet undetermined:    16. The obligation of 
 States not to expel, return or refoule refugees to   territories where 
 their life or freedom would be threatened is a cardinal   protection 
 principle enshrined in the Convention, to which no reservations   are 
 permitted. In many ways, the principle is the logical complement to the   
 right to seek asylum recognized in the Universal Declaration of Human 
 Rights.   It has come to be considered a rule of customary international 
 law binding on all States. In addition, international human rights law has 
 established non-refoulement   as a fundamental component of the absolute 
 prohibition of torture   and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or 
 punishment. The duty not to   refoule is also recognized as applying to 
 refugees irrespective of their   formal recognition, thus obviously 
 including asylum-seekers whose status has   not yet been determined 
 (underlined emphasis added).   Again, this is in regards to refugees whose 
 status is as yet not determined. The refugees that the Koizumi government 
 returned back to the country where their lives may in fact be threatened 
 had had their status determined as Œmandate refugees‚, meaning they are 
 deemed deserving of protection in the judgment of UNHCR.   And the bitter 
 irony of all ironies is that 2005 is designated by the Japanese government 
 as the time to celebrate an EU-Japan Year of People to People Exchanges. As 
 in, white Europeans are welcome, by all means, but none of those lesser 
 peoples please! We are First World people after all!   Shame on Prime 
 Minister Koizumi! Shame on the so-called Justice‚ Ministry! Shame on the 
 Japanese government!!                                   \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/02/03/57043.php
SUMMARY:Emergency Rally To Defend Kurdish&Iranian Refugees
LOCATION:50 Fremont is near Mission St and across the street from the Transbay 
 Terminal
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/02/03/57043.php
DTSTART:20050203T230000Z
DTEND:20050204T000000Z
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