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LDP backtracks on franchise bill
By F.J. Khergamvala
TOKYO, OCT. 7. Japan's ruling coalition under Mr. Yoshiro Mori is
rapidly backtracking on a commitment made to its own Korean
residents and to South Korea, mainly because homework followed
decision-making, rather than precede it. In an embarrassing and
belated retraction, the coalition has delayed a move to debate
granting adult franchise to the hundreds of thousands of Koreans
living in Japan, even without their becoming naturalised
citizens.
The loud right-wing, in identical sentiments expressed by the old
guard within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and the likes of
the Tokyo Governor, Mr. Shintaro Ishihara, has now forced Mr.
Mori and the coalition to back off from a hasty commitment.
Though the controversy that surrounds the issue of voting rights
for foreigners affects others too, the Korean community is the
determining factor. The roughly 650,000 strong foreign community
in Japan includes about 550,000 people of Korean origin. About 95
per cent of Koreans resident in Japan were themselves imported as
labourers or are descendants of such imports. They are known as
``special permanent residents.''
A Bill that was brought before Parliament in the previous session
and expected to be passed now, is now being shelved because its
contents have split not just the ruling three party coalition but
also the dominant LDP itself.
The Bill was introduced by the New Komeito, a coalition partner
of the LDP. Mr. Mori supported it then. But the LDP realised
quite late in the day that if it passes, the Bill would widen the
power base of the New Komeito. The New Komeito, whose entry into
the coalition was negotiated by Mr. Mori last year, is seen as
the main beneficiary of any local enfranchisement of ethnic
Koreans.
Two years ago, when the South Korean President, Mr. Kim Dae Jung
came to Japan, he publicly suggested in a speech that Japan grant
voting rights in local municipal elections to those ethnic
Koreans who were forcibly brought to Japan as labourers during
World War II or before, or their descendants. Since then Mr. Kim
has kept the heat on the Japanese.
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