
Okinawa police, U.S. military go on joint patrols to prevent crime
Okinawa prefectural police officers, Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki and U.S. military staff members patrol Gate Street that runs from Kadena Air Base to the downtown area late in the evening on April 18. (Kazufumi Kaneko)
OKINAWA, Okinawa Prefecture—Okinawa prefectural police and U.S. service members conducted a joint patrol here near the U.S. Kadena Air Base late on April 18 due to a recent series of sexual assaults involving U.S. military personnel in the prefecture.
Prefectural police and city government officials have been patrolling the area following the incidents. However, this time the U.S. military joined in as well. The last time a joint patrol was held was in 1974, two years after the prefecture was returned to Japanese control.
It has not yet been decided whether the joint patrols will continue.
About 120 people, including police officers from the Okinawa Police Station, city government officials and U.S. soldiers, were divided into three groups. Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki and Brian Wolford, commanding general of Marine Corps Installations Pacific, joined as well.
The groups patrolled the area around Gate Street, which runs from Kadena Air Base to the downtown area, for about four hours from 10 p.m. on April 18 to 2 a.m. on April 19.
In a ceremony before they departed, Wolford said that this patrol represents a joint effort between Japan and the United States to build local communities where residents can feel more secure.
The patrol is in response to a series of sexual assault cases that have come to light since June last year.
Last year, four sexual assault incidents involving U.S. service members—the highest on record in the last decade—were identified by the prefectural police. In one of these cases the accused was not indicted.
In response, the U.S. military stationed in Japan announced last July that they would conduct joint patrols with Japanese police as one of the countermeasures to prevent further instances of sexual assault by U.S. service members.
Under the Japan-U.S. Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), when both Japanese and U.S. investigative authorities are present at the scene of a crime committed by an U.S. military member, the U.S. authorities will detain the suspect with the possibility that the Japanese police will have a limited right to investigate.
Because of this, the prefectural police didn't immediately try to involve the U.S. military in joint patrols of the area.
However, the joint patrol on April 18 was conducted as a crime prevention measure where participants walk around the main street. So, the prefectural police agreed that the U.S. military could join the patrol.
On the day, no incidents were identified by the U.S. military.
After the patrol, Tamaki told reporters that, 'Issues with the SOFA have not yet been sorted out. However, it is important for related authorities to cooperate like we did here.'
A 67-year-old man who runs a restaurant near Gate Street said, 'Conducting patrols could lead to security, but if it ends up being just for show, similar incidents will occur again.'
The city government said it wants to continue the joint patrols, but no specific schedule has been decided yet.
The U.S. military has said it plans to hold a forum where U.S. military senior officials, prefectural officials and local residents can exchange opinions on the issue. However, this forum has not yet been scheduled.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
24 minutes ago
- NHK
NHK: Tokyo wards differ on status of international school graduates
NHK has found that Tokyo's 23 wards have different positions on the status of people who graduate from international schools in Japan. About half of the local governments do not consider such graduates as having completed the country's compulsory education system in line with official curriculum guidelines. International schools in Japan are allowed to create their own curricula, with classes given in English or other non-Japanese languages. The number of Japanese children attending these schools has been growing in Tokyo and other urban areas. NHK found that the figure has reached at least 4,800 in the capital's 23 wards. NHK established that 11 of the wards do not consider international school graduates as having completed the compulsory education at elementary or junior high schools. The wards include Minato, Meguro, Shibuya and Setagaya. More children in the 11 wards go to international schools than children in the other wards do. But ward officials say they cannot grant them graduation status unless the students also attend Japanese elementary or junior high schools. For their part, the 12 other wards grant graduation status in some cases if, among other conditions, graduates also attend schools set up by the wards and undergo interviews with principals. The wards include Toshima, Suginami and Bunkyo. The central government currently does not recognize many international schools as academic institutions where children can receive an education based on the country's compulsory education system. The education ministry says boards of education and individual schools should decide whether to grant students graduation status as they are familiar with each child's circumstances. Tohoku University Professor Aoki Eiichi, an expert on education administration, says he was surprised to learn that the wards have different positions. He also says people in Tokyo have greater mistrust in public education than their counterparts in other parts of the country. Aoki says the central government should get a clear picture of the issue surrounding the status of international school graduates and draw up guidelines to help local governments decide on how to approach the issue.


Kyodo News
an hour ago
- Kyodo News
Japan, EU eyes launch of "competitive alliance" scheme to boost trade
KYODO NEWS - 28 minutes ago - 21:04 | Japan, All, World Japan and the European Union are preparing to launch an "alliance" framework to beef up their companies' competitiveness by promoting trade and economic security cooperation, diplomatic sources said Saturday, facing concerns over U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs and Chinese trade practices. The creation of the "Japan-EU Competitiveness Alliance" is expected to be announced at a regular summit meeting being arranged for July, when Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is likely to host European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, they said. The move will further align both sides' efforts to uphold a rules-based economic order, building on cooperation through a free trade agreement that removes tariffs and other trade barriers between the two economies, which account for 20 percent of the world's gross domestic product. Under the framework, Japan and the EU will work together to diversify supply chains for rare earth minerals in the face of China's export restrictions on the elements crucial for the production of smartphones and other high-tech products, according to the sources. They will also align subsidy conditions for environmental technology such as electric vehicle and hydrogen production to promote fair competition for manufacturers and reduce development costs. On the trade front, the two sides will seek to promote reform of the World Trade Organization that is deemed dysfunctional, with the United States dissatisfied with the global body's response to addressing Chinese trade practices and other issues. They will also seek to collaborate with the "Global South" emerging and developing economies as partners sharing values of free and fair trade as well as the rule of law, the sources said. The EU is also eager to cooperate with a vast trans-Pacific free trade agreement involving Japan and 10 other nations, plus Britain that joined the accord in 2023. Some inside the bloc have called for joining efforts in rulemaking, as members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership weigh better business environment for digital trade and climate change countermeasures.


Japan Times
2 hours ago
- Japan Times
Ishiba vows to set up council for regional revitalization
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Saturday that he plans to establish a council tasked with helping promote regional revitalization led by the private sector. He hopes to include the plan, unveiled in talks with reporters during his visit to Maebashi, the capital of Gunma Prefecture, in a basic concept of his signature "Regional Revitalization 2.0" program. The envisaged council will be directly supervised by Ishiba. The basic concept is expected to be compiled this summer. "We'll consider the possibility of revising related laws while learning from the efforts being made in Maebashi" in order to help accelerate community building through public-private cooperation, Ishiba said. In Maebashi, Ishiba visited Jins Park, a regional interaction hub, which also includes an eyeglasses store. At the complex, set up by glasses chain Jins Holdings, the prime minister tried on Jins brand glasses and tasted pastries sold at the facility. He smiled and said, "This is a very nice facility." Jins Holdings has built a new office in Maebashi, using the government's tax incentive program designed to facilitate business relocations to rural areas as part of regional revitalization. Ishiba also held talks with Jins founder Hitoshi Tanaka and others, and visited a shopping district in the city.