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Japan resumes work on Okinawa

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Tokyo: The Japanese government on Monday resumed work on building a controversial US airbase on Okinawa island, sparking angry protests and scuffles with police.


The Japanese and US governments want the Futenma airbase located in a crowded city on the island moved to a sparsely populated area in the north for safety reasons. But many Okinawans want it off the island altogether.


Okinawa governor Takeshi Onaga had tried to block efforts to reclaim land for the new offshore facility and he and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe filed rival lawsuits to try to settle the issue.


“The government’s position was entirely supported by the Supreme Court ruling,” top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told a regular briefing on Monday.


He said that during a visit on Friday and Saturday by US Defence Secretary James Mattis, the two sides reaffirmed that the new facility “is the only solution”.


Japanese TV footage showed construction vessels carrying gigantic concrete blocks offshore, where workers will soon start dropping them into the water for landfill purposes.


Tokyo and Washington first proposed moving the Futenma airbase, a Marine Corps facility located in the middle of the city of Ginowan, in 1996. But the plan has been mired in local opposition.


Campaigners want a replacement built elsewhere in Japan or overseas, saying they can no longer tolerate the heavy American military presence on Okinawa due to noise, accidents and crimes by US service members.


On Monday, dozens of protesters were seen trying to block heavy trucks and machines from entering the construction site, scuffling with riot police.


Okinawa, which accounts for less than one per cent of Japan’s total land area, hosts about 28,000 US troops — more than half of the approximately 47,000 American military personnel stationed in Japan. — AFP


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