Japan set to pass security bills despite widespread anger

Japan set to pass security bills despite widespread anger

FPJ BureauUpdated: Friday, May 31, 2019, 10:25 PM IST
article-image
A demonstrator (R) holds a placard in front of policemen during a protest against Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's controversial security bills in front of the National Diet in Tokyo on September 18, 2015. Japan was expected to pass security bills on September 18 that would allow troops to fight on foreign soil for the first time since World War II, despite fierce criticism it will fundamentally alter the character of the pacifist nation. AFP PHOTO / KAZUHIRO NOGI |

Tokyo : Japan is expected to pass security bills today that would allow troops to fight on foreign soil for the first time since World War II, despite fierce criticism it will fundamentally alter the character of the pacifist nation.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling coalition wants to vote the controversial bills into law after days of heated debate that at times descended into scuffles, tears and tantrums.

Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets in almost daily rallies, in a show of public anger on a scale rarely seen in Japan.

Today hundreds gathered again outside the parliament in Tokyo.

Opponents argue the new laws — which would allow the tightly restricted military to fight in defence of allies — violate Japan’s constitution and could see the country dragged into American wars in far-flung parts of the globe.

In fraught scenes uncommon for Japan’s normally sedate parliament, opposition lawmakers on Thursday pushed and shoved in a failed bid to stop a committee approving the bills.

The legislation was expected to go to a vote in the full upper house sometime today.

Abe has faced fierce criticism for his handling of the bills and there are growing signs the campaign has taken a political toll.

Opinion polls show the vast majority of the public is against the changes, and Abe’s once sky-high approval rating is dropping.

Nationalist Abe wants what he calls a normalisation of Japan’s military posture, which has been restricted to narrowly-defined self-defence and aid missions by a pacifist constitution imposed by the US after World War II.

RECENT STORIES

UK: 5 Asylum Seekers, Including a 7-Year-Old, Died While Trying To Cross The English Channel

UK: 5 Asylum Seekers, Including a 7-Year-Old, Died While Trying To Cross The English Channel

UK Passes Controversial Law To Send Asylum Seekers To Rwanda

UK Passes Controversial Law To Send Asylum Seekers To Rwanda

Dubai Airport Operations Back To Normal After Experiencing Heaviest Rainfall In Past 75 Years

Dubai Airport Operations Back To Normal After Experiencing Heaviest Rainfall In Past 75 Years

India, Turkmenistan Among Asian Countries Hit By Heatwave In 2023, Says UN Report

India, Turkmenistan Among Asian Countries Hit By Heatwave In 2023, Says UN Report

Earthquake Alert! Massive 6.1 Magnitude Quake Jolts Taiwan A Day After 5 Tremors Hit Hualien County;...

Earthquake Alert! Massive 6.1 Magnitude Quake Jolts Taiwan A Day After 5 Tremors Hit Hualien County;...