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Showing posts with the label Denny Tamaki

(News Flash) Okinawa has appealed the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transportation’s “cancellation of permission withdrawal” to its complaint on the Henoko landfill. (28de21)

A new base is under construction at Henoko in Nago, Okinawa. Okinawa Prefecture revoked permission for it. However, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transportation decided to cancel the revocation. Claiming that cancellation is illegal, the Prefecture has filed an appeal requesting that the cancellation itself be revoked. On 28 December, the Prefecture made its final appeal on its dissatisfaction to the Naha Branch of the Fukuoka High Court for judgement. On 15 December, the Fukuoka High Court, without making a judgement on whether the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transportation’s decision was legal or not, had dismissed the Prefecture’s complaint. In response to press corps questions at the Prefectural Office, Governor Denny Tamaki offered this criticism, “It’s like they sliced off regional autonomy and trashed it.” The deadline for the appeal was 4 January 2022. Back in November, the Okinawa Defense bureau requested design changes to widen the landfill in the sea ar...

Restrictions in the case of widespread Covid-19 to include even a halt to Okinawa’s “Discover the Splendor” business. (28de21)

At a press conference on 27 December, Governor Denney Tamaki discussed the “Okinawa, Discover the Splendor Campaign, meant to stimulate demand for regional tourism by subsidizing a portion of travel expenses. He pointed out that he is considering restrictive measures in case the Covid-19 situation worsens in the prefecture. In response to the infectious conditions, three tiers of restriction standards will be established. Although the restrictions are just for guidance, there may be cases where businesses are shut down quickly in view of the infectious conditions. For the first tier, the prefecture is divided into three zones: Okinawa Island, Miyako and Yaeyama. Within the jurisdiction of each health department, the use of the campaign will be shut down if the number of Covid-19 cases in their region surpasses 25 out of 100,000 people. The campaign cannot be used for travel to the shutdown region or even within the island. For the second tier, new campaign sales will be halted if, thro...

4 suspected Omicron cases on Okinawa Island, half of the 21 new infections in the north, 19 of them related to the US Military. (27de21)

On 26 December, Okinawa Prefecture reported confirmation of 1 person testing positive for Covid-19 with the suspicion that the infection is the Omicron strain. In an examination of screening specimens, the Delta strain showed up negative, but that brings the total of people suspected of having the Omicron strain to 4. The Prefecture is moving on to genome analysis and expects the results around 28 December. In the prefecture, 21 new cases of Covid-19 have been confirmed among males and females between the ages of 10 and 99. 18 of them have appeared since just last Sunday. By location, half were in northern Okinawa, with 9 in the town of Motobu where the virus is spreading. As for the new infections suspected of being the Omicron strain, the family of a base worker at the US Military Camp Hansen tested positive for the Omicron strain. At present, the Prefecture is not revealing where the family lives. Up until now in the prefecture, 10 people have been confirmed with the Omicron strain....

With the base cluster at 255 and another drunk driving suspect, Okinawa’s governor’s reproach: “Lax discipline coupled with inept management!” (26de21)

A huge cluster of Covid-19 has occurred at the US Military Camp Hansen base. Meanwhile on 25 December, the Naha Police arrested a US Marine corporal (24) stationed at the same base on suspicion of being in the act of violating the Road Traffic Law (drunk driving) by driving a motorbike while in a drunken condition.  Just after dawn on the morning of 21 December, a US Marine lance corporal from the very same base had also been arrested on suspicion of violating the Road Traffic Law (drunk driving). So, on 21 December, the Prefecture requested that all military personnel employed at Camp Hansen and their dependents be prohibited from leaving the base. However, the laxity of discipline on the base has once again become apparent. On hearing the news that a marine stationed at Camp Hansen was arrested in the act on suspicion of drunk driving, Governor Denny Tamaki issued this harsh criticism in a document, “Their military discipline is incredibly lax, coupled with what I can only call i...

US Marine from the base in Okinawa where the Covid-19 cluster erupted suspected of drunk driving. (25de21)

In the early dawn of 25 December, Okinawa Prefectural Police announced they had arrested Corporal Jarett Michael McMahon, 24, stationed at the US Marine base Camp Hansen, in the act on suspicion of violation of the Road Traffic Law (drunk driving). Police said he partly denied the charge stating, “I drank alcohol, but I didn’t think enough was left in my body to get arrested for it.”  According to the Naha Police Station, just after midnight on 25 December, the Marine was suspected of driving a motor-bike while intoxicated on a city road at District 2 in Matsuyama in Naha.  In a breath analysis, McMahon’s alcohol level registered 3 times the legal limit. Police say he stated, “From about five in the evening until midnight, I was drinking beer and whiskey on and off at a bar in Naha.” A policeman spotted 2 people without helmets riding a motor-bike. He investigated and said he found the 2 were both Marines from Camp Hansen and had been drinking alcohol. The location was a bar d...

Okinawa’s governor to US Forces in Japan not carrying out PCR testing: “Outrageous!” (24de21)

Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki: “It’s incredibly shocking. And from my own viewpoint it’s outrageous!” His response was to news that, after a cluster of over 200 troops at the US Military base Camp Hansen were diagnosed with Covid-19, it is now clear that the unit with the infected troops left the US and arrived in Japan without any PCR testing being done at either end.  The US Military at the outset claimed that the troops had been tested. But really, the testing was not carried out on the premise that the troops had already been fully vaccinated. According to the US Forces in Japan Headquarters: “Sometime in September, the rule on testing before entry to Japan was lifted.” Moreover, it has become apparent that the troops under restricted movement could freely go in and out of base facilities inside Camp Hansen. Okinawa Prefecture Governor Denny Tamaki noted: “If, by chance, the virus spreads, they’ll have only their own actions to thank. When you consider it from the perspective of so...

“A real shame, just on the 50th Anniversary of Reversion,” says Governor Denny Tamaki on the proposed Okinawa budget cut to below its 300 billion yen level. (23de21)

For 10 straight years the national budget for Okinawa has been set at the 300 billion yen level, but, for 2020, the National Government’s plan is to reduce it to about 268 billion, a cut of about 33 billion yen compared to last year’s budget. On 22 December, in response to the news, Governor Denny Tamaki offered his take on the cut, “As a budget intertwined with the development of our new Okinawa Promotion at the outset of next year’s milestone 50th year since reversion to Japan, neither the prefecture’s people, nor indeed our municipalities can conceive of this being a response to the prefecture’s wishes.” Citing next year as the year initiating the new Okinawa Promotion for the benefit of the whole Japanese economy, governor Tamaki continued, “Huge wide-scale cuts of this magnitude,  and their cruel shamelessness, leave me speechless.” Within the budget is the lump sum grant to be used at the discretion of the Prefecture. This, too, is expected to receive a drastic cut of 21.9 bi...

Okinawa Promotion budget at 240.3 billion yen in Finance Ministry proposal, under 300 billion for first time in 10 years a possibility. (22de21)

On 21 December, the Cabinet Office submitted a Ministry of Finance proposal that will set next year’s Okinawa Promotion budget at 240.3 billion yen at the LDP Okinawa Promotion Enquiry Committee. On 22 December, Cabinet Secretary for Okinawa and the North Kosaburo Nishime and Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki are expected to decide on the budget amount after discussions. However, the reduction in the public budget, which has remained in the 300 billion range for the past 10 years, has become  huge. The Finance Ministry proposal is 60 billion less than this year's initial budget of 301 billion yen. Within the budget, the high lump sum grant has been reduced from this year’s 50 billion to 48.1 billion yen. In 2013, then Governor Hirokazu Nakaima received a promise to guarantee the Okinawa Promotion budget at the 300 billion yen budget until 2021 from then Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in return for permission for the landfill at Henoko in Nago, Okinawa Prefecture. Since 2013, the budget ...

Is the Omicron strain spreading from a US base in Okinawa? The governor is about to request a halt to troop transfers, 186 Covid-19 infections in the US Military. (21de21)

The new Omicron strain of Covid-19 has been confirmed among infected base workers and others from the US Military Camp Hansen one after another. In response, Governor Denny Tamaki, on 20 December, announced that he will confer by telephone on the morning of 21 December with the coordinator of  the four US forces in Okinawa, Marine Commanding General Lieutenant General James W. Bierman Jr. and Deputy Foreign Minister Kiyoshi Odawara. He will request that exits from Camp Hansen be prohibited and transfers from the US halted. Governor Tamaki explained, “I have an opinion from National Institute of Infectious Disease experts that they fear Omicron strain infections within the bases will spread widely.” The  4 items to be discussed will be that: (1) transfers of military people and their dependents from the US or elsewhere cease, (2) PCR exams be carried out on all military and military dependents, (3) the level of the health care system of US forces in Okinawa be raised and all mi...

Final discussions on the Okinawa Promotion policy, the scope of the budget cuts and term of the Special Measures Law. (20de21)

Final discussions on Okinawa Prefecture’s Promotion Policy are in view.  The major points are the scope of cuts to the Promotion budget and the review of the term of the Okinawa Promotion Special Measures Law, due to expire at the end of this year. Looking ahead to next year’s election year, the battle between the National Government and the Prefecture is intensifying.  Chief Cabinet Secretary Mizuno held a press conference on a19 December visit to the town of Kadena in the prefecture. On the 2022 Promotion budget, he went only so far as to note, “The editing work on next year’s budget is moving along and it’s being decided within the budget.” Since 2013, the Promotion budget has been maintained at the 300 billion yen level. Back in 2013, Prime Minister Abe promised then Governor Hirokazu Nakai  that the 300 billion yen level would be guaranteed yearly until 2021, in return for his permission for construction work to relocate the US Military Futenma Airfield in Ginowan to...

2 in Okinawa newly infected with the Omicron strain, while the US Military cluster reaches 158. (19de21)

At the US Military Camp Hansen Base in the town of Kin in Okinawa Prefecture, the huge cluster of Covid-19 cases is still rising. On 18 December, Okinawa Prefecture reported that the infection there had spread to 158 US Marines. Moreover, it has been revealed that a woman in her fifties associated with the US Military along with her Japanese husband in his sixties have had their infection with the Omicron strain of Covid-19 confirmed. According to the Prefecture, on 12 December, the woman associated with the Military and, on 14 December, the man showed symptoms such as a fever. An examination confirmed they had the Omicron strain of infections. The two live outside the base. Furthermore, PCR examinations were carried out on close associates of the Japanese male base-worker whose Omicron strain infection was confirmed on 17 December. It has been learned that one of them is also suspected of having the Omicron strain. There is a fear that the virus will become even more widespread. The P...

The Omicron variant in Okinawa, cluster and related investigations: “Possibility of city-wide spread from US Military base.” (18de21)

A man in his fifties from Uruma in Okinawa who works at the US Military Camp Hansen has been confirmed as infected with the Omicron strain of Covid-19. At a press conference on 17 December, Governor Denny Tamaki  and Director of Public Health Science Itokazu pointed out that, from their viewpoint, they suspected the path of transmission was from infections within the base. Director Itokazu noted, “There is a possibility of a widening from the base to a city-wide infection. At Camp Hansen, a large-scale cluster of 100 infected Marines who had been transferred to Okinawa from the US Mainland was discovered. The Prefecture requested a genome analysis, but the US Military has not responded. So, the Prefecture is unable to determine whether or not their infections are from the Omicron strain. The Prefecture claims it is in the midst of investigating if there is an epidemiological connection between the base-worker’s infection and those in the US Military related cluster. The explanation...

At a party on the anniversary of his third year since taking office, Governor Denny Tamaki reflected on his Henoko ‘refusal’ decision, “If they want a new fight, we’ll take them on!” (17de21)

On 16 December, Okinawa Prefecture Governor Denny Tamaki held a political fund-raising party at a hotel in Naha to report on his three years in office as governor. Touching on his decision to refuse the request for design changes for the new base construction at Henoko in Nago, the governor made clear his commitment, “Following the dying wish of the late Governor Takeshi Onaga, if they intend a new fight, we’ll confront them!” He also alluded to such topics as the battle against the spread of Covid-19, his achievements so far with PCR testing, and his aspirations for his fourth year. However, he was vague about whether he’d run in the gubernatorial race to be held next fall. As for Memorial Day next year on the 50th Anniversary of Okinawa’s Return to Japan, Governor Tamaki pointed out his thinking that the voices and thoughts of the Prefecture’s people be embedded in the Peace Declaration that he will transmit. He will moreover strongly advance measures to realize an issue that he has ...