Japan | Okinawa gov revokes approval for relocation of US air base

Locals protest outside the fence of Camp Schwab, an American base near a planned relocation site of a U.S. air base, in Nago, Okinawa, southern Japan

Locals protest outside the fence of Camp Schwab, an American base near a planned relocation site of a U.S. air base, in Nago, Okinawa, southern Japan

Okinawa’s governor yesterday revoked approval for work needed to relocate a U.S. air base from one area of the southern Japanese island to another, but the Tokyo government said it would still proceed with the plan.
Local residents object to living with U.S. Marine Air Station Futenma and want the base moved off Okinawa. Current plans call for moving it to a less developed area on the island called Henoko.
Gov. Takeshi Onaga was elected last year on promises to fight the move, revoked the local approval given in 2013 by his predecessor on the grounds of “legal defects.”
“I will work to keep my promise not to allow another base in Henoko,” Onaga said yesterday.
Government spokesman Yoshihide Suga rejected Onaga’s stance, saying the base must be moved for safety reasons.
“There is no change in our plan to proceed with the work,” Suga told reporters in Tokyo. He called Onaga’s decision “very regrettable.”
The central government suspended the land reclamation work on Aug. 10 to allow for a month of talks to reach a compromise with the Okinawan government, but that proved to be too short of a period to resolve two decades of political fighting, and the reclamation work resumed last month despite strong protests by local residents and activists at the site.
The defense minister, Gen Nakatani, said work on the site would be suspended, but that it would restart as soon as possible. He planned to request an investigation and seek a court injunction to overturn Onaga’s revocation.
Okinawa houses more than half of the 50,000 U.S. troops stationed in Japan and U.S. bases occupy nearly a fifth of the land on its main island. But the local government says the bases are a drain on the economy, providing less than 5 percent of its business activity and employing only 1.4 percent of its workers.
A leaflet issued by the Okinawa government shows significant gains in the local economy from areas already redeveloped once land was returned by the U.S. military. Elaine Kurtenbach, Tokyo, AP

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