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Financing and refurbishing of bases. International and local negotiations[+]

Extract and translated from the French E-bulletin “Japan Analysis – La Lettre du Japon” n°11, March 2008, p. 4-5. adapted from MoD, MoFA, Yomiuri, Asahi.

French Editor: G. Delamotte. Translation: Peter Brown

 

A new complaint of rape against an American soldier based at Okinawa was lodged in February before being quickly withdrawn.

 

The American government has introduced a curfew, and both governments have agreed on preventitive measures. These include incorporating explanations about Okinawa into the soldiers’ training program; the setting up of a Japan-American police patrol involving both Japanese policemen and American soldiers; and the placing of security cameras in neighbouring communities which think this desirable [1]...


[1] “Kichigai kyojū no beiheisū tsūchi”, Yomiuri, 23 February 2008.

Shortly prior to this, the two governments renegotiated, after two years, the agreement on special measures regulating the Japanese contribution to the running costs of the bases.

 

The new agreement on the new special measures, which is based on article 14 of the SOFA (Status of Forces Agreement), reduces this contribution in 2009 and 2010 by 1.5% in comparison with what it was in the 2007 financial year. The objective announced by the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs was for a reduction of 5%[1]. The former agreement was due to expire in March and the one signed on 25 January will be valid for three years.

 

This agreement stipulates the number of Japanese workers on the bases (kept at 23,000 by the new agreement) and that the energy, electricity and water bills of the bases are to be paid for by the Japanese government (25.3 billion yen for the 2008 financial year, an amount identical to that of 2007; 24.9 billion in 2009 and 2010); lastly, the “transport costs” occasioned by the geography of Okinawa are also to be paid for by the Japanese government (night landings from an aircraft carrier are made on Iōtō, an island in the electoral district of Tōkyō; training exercises involving use of firearms that would go beyond road 104 are carried out on Honshū; parachutists use the runway at Iejima, in the Okinawa prefecture[2]). In 2007, the Japanese government contributed 140.9 billion yen under the terms of this agreement.

 

A further contribution falling under this agreement is made in accordance with article 6 of the SOFA security treaty. These are costs over and above salaries, such as for language classes given to Japanese workers, and the costs of shared equipment and facilities, which amounted to 76.5 billion in 2007[3].

 

With the costs associated with  improvements to the outskirts of the bases and the ancillary costs borne by  the Japanese government, the bases cost it around 600 billion yen a year[4].

 

Since 2000, however, the Japanese government has managed to have its portion of the costs for the bases reduced. The Ministry for Defence has also negotiated with the trade union of those workers working on the bases for the elimination of certain payments and priviliges. These involve an additional salary component, language classes, and a supplementary benefit on retirement – and this will have the effect of producing budgetary savings of a  billion yen[5].

 

The bases are the subject of transactions between the national government and the local government. The special law on the reorganisation of American forces, passed on May 23 2007, allocates subsidies to those communities, affected by the change, which have accepted the restructuring plans resulting from the inter-governmental agreement of May 1st 2006 (this law also gives responsibility for financing the transfer of Marines to Guam to the Japanese Bank for International Cooperation). There is a four-step process for allocation of these subsidies. The first occurs once a construction project is accepted; then at the start of an environmental impact study; then once works begin, and finally on their completion. A budget of 5.1 billion yen was provided in 2007. Thirty-three municipalities were designated on October 31 2007 by the Ministry of Defence to be recipients of this aid[6].

 

Iwakuni (Yamaguchi prefecture) was one of the areas which were late in joining up to the government’s projects. In a March 2006 referendum, its inhabitants had rejected by 87% the government’s plan– involving the transfer of an aircraft carrier and 59 planes from the naval base of Atsugi, as well as 12 refuelling planes from the Marine base of Futenma, to the Marines’ airbase located in the municipality. On February 10 2008, they elected Fukuda Yoshihiko, a candidate favourable to them, voting out the incumbent Ihara Katsusuke[7]. The number of votes separating the two candidates was only around 1 700.

 

The new governor immediately announced that he was accepting the transfer of an aircraft carrier (1 900 soldiers) and asked for the subsidies to which the city could still lay claim for the fiscal year 2007 (3.5 billion yen for new building works; 13.4 billion in terms of subsidies to see in the transformation)[8].


[1] “Genkaku 3nenkande 8okuen, Asahi, 13 December 2007.
[2] Source : MoD.
[3] “Kakusakyū nado haishi he”, Yomiuri, 19 December 2007.
[4] “Omoiyari yosan genkaku nankō”, Asahi, 8 December 2007.
[5] “Kakusakyū nado haishi he”, Yomiuri, 19 December 2007.
[6] “Hantai no nago ya Zama jogai, Asahi, 1er November 2007.
[7] “Iwakuni shichōsen ga kokuji, Yomiuri, 4 February 2008; “Seifu keikaku shinten ni kitai, Yomiuri, 11 February 2008.
[8] “Beigun idenchū Iwakuni ukeire, Yomiuri, 29 February 2008.
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