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people who declared to be Ainu, while many Ainu conceal their identity to avoid discrimination.
The Ministry recognized that between the seventeenth and the nineteenth centuries, the Ainu in
Hokkaido were put into forced labour, deprived of their resources, prevented from practising
their traditional activities. After 1867, the Meiji Restoration, modern Japanese nation State
started to exploit Hokkaido, and adopted an assimilation policy, so the Ainu society and culture
was fatally damaged. This condition continued until the twentieth century.
23.
In 1997, a law for the promotion of the Ainu culture was enacted. It establishes the
Foundation for Research and Promotion of Ainu culture, in charge of implementing the law.
This text provides for the promotion of the Ainu language and culture, the research on the Ainu
and the dissemination of knowledge about Ainu traditions. The Foundation organizes classes to
teach the Ainu language, but does not plan to create a specific writing to prevent the Ainu
language from disappearing.
24.
In relation to the discrimination against Ainu people, the Ministry reported that they
mainly face vexations and marriage refusals. Concerning social indicators, 16.1 per cent of the
Ainu who finish high school continue into higher education, as opposed to the general average
of 34.5 per cent in the area. There is a specific programme for scholarships for Ainu, but there
are no quotas in universities for Ainu students, since those would be considered unconstitutional.
25.
The Ministry of Social Welfare, Health and Employment has a programme of
professional orientation for Ainu, a recruitment service, and lends money to allow Ainu to find
an employment. It briefs managers on the discrimination of the Ainu and promotes their
recruitment. The Ministry of Justice has local legal services that mediate between parties in
cases of individual conflicts or complaints. For example, in cases of marriage refusal linked to
the Ainu origin of one of the persons, the legal service intervenes through mediation in order to
resolve the conflict.
26.
The 1997 law concerns the Ainu culture but does not touch upon the promotion of their
human rights. In this regard, the Ministry of Land and Infrastructure indicated that the Japanese
Constitution guarantees equality before the law of each Japanese. Therefore, the demands of the
Ainu people to get recognition of the rights as indigenous peoples cannot be satisfied, as this
would be in breach of the Constitution.
C. The people of Okinawa
27.
The Government has taken a set of actions toward Okinawa, including formulating the
“Okinawa Promotion and Development Plan”, with a view to closing the economic gap with the
mainland, establishing the Okinawa Policy Council, composed by all Cabinet ministers and the
Governor of Okinawa, so as to deliberate on basic policies regarding Okinawa, and passing
the 2002 Law on Special Measures for the Promotion and Development of Okinawa.
D. Koreans and other foreigners
28.
There are around 2 million documented foreigners in Japan, of whom 607,419 are
Koreans. The policy of the Government to fight against the discrimination of Koreans in the
labour sector consists in briefing employers on discrimination, administrative guidance in case of
discriminatory hiring procedures, and sensitization activities to the whole society. In particular,