Rally in Uruma, Okinawa, requests scrapping of GSDF training ground plan. (22mr24)

Splendor of Okinawa: Zonal Geranium, roadside Uruma, 10mr24


The Defense Ministry is planning to  develop the vacant site of a former golf course into a Ground Self Defense Force (GSDF) training ground in Uruma, Okinawa Prefecture. In response on 20 March, city residents and others held a rally in the city to request that the plan be scrapped.


The Defense Ministry is scheduling training there for human assistance during disasters, night reconnaissance,  and such. However, rally participant Shiho Fuchaku expressed concern that the contents of the training would broaden. She complained, “We want to protect the safety of our children!”


The Defense Ministry plans to upgrade the Naha-based 15th GSDF Brigade to division level. It claims it needs new training ground facilities in coordination with the increase in personnel. The ministry will purchase the site during 2024, with actual construction targeted for 2026.


Governor Denny Tamaki has requested that the plan be scrapped. The Okinawa Prefectural Assembly has unanimously approved a document of opinion requesting that the Government revert the plan to a blank sheet.


Original Japanese article: Kyodo Communications, published Wednesday 20 March 2024 at 18:51.  https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/d04f1b345bc69398b5351d0342566a1708dfa449


Denny in the News: news about Governor Denny Tamaki.


Denny Tamaki is the governor of Okinawa Prefecture in Japan. Although Okinawa is important as an international tourist destination and a key element in strategic US Military Forces, its governor receives very little coverage in the Japanese press and almost none in the English language media. 


This blog hopes to  translate one news article a day on the governor.  It is unsponsored and unauthorized. The translator simply hopes to improve his skills and perhaps give the governor an English speaking audience. 


Any suggestion on improving my translation will be gratefully accepted. However, please leave political comments for another forum.


Where they occur, words and phrases in Ryukyuan (the Okinawan language) are rendered in italics and translated in parentheses. Names  whose readings are uncertain are rendered as Name (=Kanji?) as in Nagayuki (=長行?). Any corrections in such instances would be gratefully appreciated.


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