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  • Sunday Mainichi on Foreign Crime Fearmongering as NPA policy

    Posted by debito on December 22nd, 2006

    Hi Blog. SITYS. See I told you so. As far back as 2000 (when this whole thing started, really–Check out Chapter Three of my book JAPANESE ONLY), I was saying that foreign crime was being artificially generated by policymakers in order to justify more budgetary outlay. Well, here’s an article on it from the Mainichi Daily News. Courtesy of Ben at The Community (thanks). Debito in Sapporo

    ===========================
    Author dismisses government’s fear mongering myth of crime wave by foreigners

    MAINICHI DAILY NEWS December 21, 2006
    http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/waiwai/news/20061221p2g00m0dm003000c.html

    Translating Sunday Mainichi article dated Dec 31, 2006, original version blogged here.

    For years, people like Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara have been up in
    arms about rising crime rates among foreigners and juveniles in Japan,
    but one of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government’s public safety experts
    has come out to say the claims are groundless, according to Sunday
    Mainichi (12/31).

    Ishihara and his ilk have long laid the blame on foreigners for a
    perceived worsening of public safety standards that has allowed the
    powers that be to strengthen and crack down on non-Japanese and teens.

    But Hiroshi Kubo, the former head of the Tokyo Metropolitan
    Government’s Emergency Public Safety Task Force, says they’ve got it
    all wrong.

    “Put simply, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government’s public safety policy
    involves telling people that public safety standards have worsened and
    police groups need strengthening to protect the capital’s residents,”
    Kubo tells Sunday Mainichi. “But I’ve realized there’s something
    unnatural about this ‘worsening.’”

    In his newly released book, Kubo goes through the statistical data
    being used to justify taking a hard line on foreigners and kids and
    argues that maybe it’s not quite all there. For instance, the growing
    crime rate in Tokyo is based on reported crimes, not actual crime
    cases. This means the count includes cases where people who have been
    scared into believing their safety is under such a threat they contact
    the police for any trifling matter only to be sent away with no action
    taken.

    And taking a look back over the past 40 years shows that violent
    crimes by juveniles has actually declined. Current worries about how
    youths are becoming more criminally inclined — and at a younger age
    – sound like a recording of similar cries dating back to the ’60s.

    Crimes by foreigners have long been highlighted, but there’s little to
    suggest that Tokyo or Japan is in the midst of a violent crime spree.
    In 2002, there were 102 non-Japanese arrested in Tokyo for violent
    crimes including murder, armed robbery, arson and rape. The following
    year, that number jumped to 156, fell back to 117 in 2004 and was just
    84 in 2005. And the number of violent crimes foreigners are committing
    in Tokyo is not a patch on the Japanese, who account for about 1,000
    cases a year.

    Kubo says authorities are merely fear mongering, taking statistics
    that work in their favor and molding them to suit their purposes.
    National Police Agency data is used the same way as authorities are
    doing in Tokyo, spreading fear nationwide.

    “There’s an underlying current of anxiety throughout society. People
    have no idea what’s going to happen in the future, they’re worried
    about employment and pay and declining living standards and somebody
    who’s going to openly talk about the reason for their anxieties is
    going to attract their interest,” the public safety expert tells
    Sunday Mainichi. “Say somebody comes out and says ‘foreigners’ violent
    crimes are all to blame’ then anxious people are going to go along
    with that. And the national government, prefectural governments,
    police and the media all jump on the bandwagon and believe what’s
    being said.” (By Ryann Connell)

    December 21, 2006
    ENDS

    ==========================
    More on how the police fudge the stats at
    http://www.debito.org/crimestats.html
    http://www.debito.org/TheCommunity/communityissues.html#police
    ENDS

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