2008-07-04
SAPPORO, Japan - Twenty South Korean activist farmers have been detained by Japanese immigration for over 19 hours and expect to be deported, a spokesman for the group said, in further signs of growing security jitters from the host nation ahead of a G8 summit.
Japan has so far detained and questioned around 40 people, including journalists and academics, although many have been allowed to enter the country after several hours.
"They are classifying people unilaterally, without sufficient information or standards," Hong Hyung-suk, spokesman for the Korean Peasants League told Reuters by telephone from New Chitose Airport, where the group is being held.
"We are not terrorists."
Police officers walk past an advertisement banner outside a pachinko pinball parlor reading "Summit on Friday" in Sapporo on Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, as part of the security measures ahead of the G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit July 4, 2008. REUTERS/Yuriko NakaoView Larger Image View Larger Image
Police officers walk past an advertisement banner outside a pachinko pinball parlor reading "Summit on Friday" in Sapporo on Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, as part of the security measures ahead of the G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit July 4, 2008.
Some of the South Korean activist farmers, who also belong to the international Via Campesina peasant movement, have been arrested in the past and participated in protests against the World Trade Organization in Hong Kong in 2005, representatives of the groups said.
Immigration officials in Sapporo were not immediately available for comment. Officials have previously confirmed that some people had been detained but declined to comment further.
Japan, fearful of violence during the July 7-9 G8 summit, has deployed 21,000 police officers on the northern island of Hokkaido, where the meeting will be held.
Police in Sapporo, the island's capital, conducted a security training exercise on Friday morning, stopping traffic and people as VIP black cars passed through the central streets of the city.
The security budget is some 30 billion yen ($280 million), topping the 113 million euros ($180 million) spent at the last summit in Germany.
Other activists detained and questioned by immigration include political scientist Susan George, a vocal critic of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, and Lydinyda Nacpil, the Asia-Pacific coordinator for Jubilee South, an advocacy group calling for debt cancellation for poor countries.
In some cases, detentions have stretched for over 10 hours, journalists, activists and academics have said.
"Japan, citing the G8 summit, has limited visas without specific cause and has insisted on extremely detailed plans from its visitors, making entrance into the country difficult," the G8 Summit NGO Forum, an umbrella group for non-governmental organizations, said in a statement.
"This is robbing us of free speech and the exchange of ideas," it said.
Two other South Korean nationals, one affiliated with the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, have been deported, Japan's G8 Media Network has said.
Anti-G8 protests have become a fixture of G8 summits. On Sunday, two rallies in Tokyo gathered over 1,000 people, including anti-capitalists, labor union members and protesters from abroad, such as Spain and South Korea. Eight men were arrested after scuffling with police at one of the rallies.
But tight security and the sheer cost of traveling to the remote site of the summit, at a hilltop luxury hotel in rural Hokkaido, is expected to dampen turnout compared with previous summits.
Demonstrations are anticipated near the summit venue -- where some 1,000-plus protesters are expected to gather in three camp sites -- and organizers of a peace rally in Sapporo ahead of the summit hope to draw 10,000 participants.
($1=106.71 yen)
($1=.6362 euro)
(Additional reporting by Jung Heejung and Yuriko Nakao in Sapporo and Edwina Gibbs in Tokyo; Editing by Brent Kininmont)
Yoko Kubota , Reuters
Published: Friday, July 04, 2008