Japan’s shady secrecy bill
http://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=2981509
Japans shady secrecy bill
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The buzz in Japanese cyberspace is that Chinese President Xi is wagging the dog by declaring a controversial air defense identification zone across the East China Sea. The move has drastically ramped up tensions with Japan and the United States, both of which have blatantly disregarded Beijings unilateral edict. According to one prevailing theory, Xi is whipping up an international storm to change the subject domestically away from income inequality, official corruption and Chinas blackening skies.
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How can the government respond to growing demands for transparency from a public outraged by the consequences of the Fukushima nuclear accident if it enacts a law that gives it a free hand to classify any information considered too sensitive as a state secret? Reporters Without Borders asked in a Nov. 27 statement. Essentially, the group argued, Japan is making investigative journalism illegal, and is trampling on the fundamental principles of the confidentiality of journalists sources and public interest.
Welcome to the land of the setting sun. Lets see how much darker it will get, Tokyo-based investigative reporter Jake Adelstein wrote in a Nov. 30 Japan Times op-ed. As Adelstein pointed out, the secrecy bill bears a resemblance to Japans pre-World War II Peace Preservation Law, which gave the government wide latitude to arrest and jail individuals who were out of step with its policies. Parts of the bill also echo the George W. Bush-Dick Cheney power grab that was the Patriot Act.
Japans press to freedom ranking is already in free fall. In 2013, its standing dropped 31 places from 2012 to a new low of 53rd out of 179 countries, according to Reporters Without Borders. Japan now trails South Africa and the Comoro Islands off Mozambique. The main culprit behind this years drop was weak reporting on radiation risks at Fukushima - a problem thats sure to get even worse as incentives for media self-censorship increase.