E/CN.4/2006/16/Add.2
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discrimination they face. However, the Government has not acceded to this request. In this
context, they mentioned that in 1997, in the case of the Nibutani dam built in an expropriated
sacred Ainu land, the Sapporo District Court recognized the indigenous nature of the Ainu. They
are among the few indigenous peoples in the world who have no land recognized as their
indigenous land.
50.
Finally, the Ainu are absent in the national political sphere: there was only one Ainu
parliamentarian in the past, whom the Special Rapporteur has met, and none at present. The
Ainu have requested a quota of parliamentarians reserved for the Ainu community.
C. The people of Okinawa
51.
The people of Okinawa explained that they have suffered from a discriminatory
governmental policy since the annexation of the island in 1879. The people of Okinawa are
rarely consulted on the decisions affecting their island and its future. The most serious
discrimination they presently endure is linked to the presence of the American military bases in
their island. The Government justifies the presence of the bases in the name of “public interest”.
However, the people of Okinawa explained that they suffered daily from the consequences of the
military bases: permanent noise linked to the military airport, plane and helicopter crashes,
accidents due to bullets or “whiz-bangs”, oil pollution, fires due to air manoeuvres, and criminal
acts by American military officers. The noise due to airplanes and helicopters is higher than the
level prescribed by law and causes severe health consequences, including in schools where
children cannot concentrate and lessons are regularly interrupted. A number of court trials have
taken place, but the Okinawan people have almost always lost. During one of these trials, the
Government was reported to have made discriminatory statements about the people of Okinawa,
saying that they had special feelings, that they were not normal, which provoked a scandal.
52.
Between 1972 and 2005, there were 338 plane crashes on the island. In particular, in a
case of a helicopter crash on a university campus, the aid workers and police were driven out, the
prefecture could not participate in the investigations and the victims received no compensation.
Many people on the island fear crashes. Also, several cases of women being raped and killed by
American military officers have occurred, as well as of young schoolgirls being sexually
harassed. On those occasions, the Government said it would take appropriate measures, but
thereafter nothing was done.
53.
As a consequence, some of the people of Okinawa want it to become an independent
territory, in order to stop being subject to permanent human rights violations.
D. The Koreans
54.
During his visit to the Utoro district, the Special Rapporteur had the opportunity to
witness concretely the conditions in which a Korean community lives today, one which was
placed by the Government of Japan on this piece of land during the Second World War, in order
to build a military airport. When the war ended, the project of building the airport was
abandoned, and the Koreans who were working there, far from receiving war reparations, were
forgotten and left in that land without work, resources, protection or legal status. The sanitary
conditions of Utoro are deplorable: a considerable number of the families have no running
water, and the district has no channels to evacuate water, which often provokes floods. There are