Japanese Parliament Debate Over Pacifism Erupts in Brawl

A heated discussion in Japan’s upper house erupted into a brawl last week. Breaking with their pacifist past, for the first time since World War II Japan voted to allow its military to fight on foreign soil.

Lead by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the measure was meant, “normalise Japan’s military posture, which has been restricted to narrowly defined self-defence and aid missions by a pacifist constitution imposed by the US after World War II,” reported Al Jazeera.

Opponents fear a shift away from pacifism will draw Japan into US-lead wars.

Al Jazeera reports:

The upper house of the Japanese parliament passed the law on Saturday, despite fierce attempts by opposition politicians to block the move.The approval makes the legislation into law, loosening post-World War II constraints on the use of force by the military to its own self-defence only.The legislation, passed by the more powerful lower house in July, sparked sizable protests and debate about whether the nation should shift away from its pacifist ways to face growing security challenges.The motion, backed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling coalition, passed following days of heated debate that, at times, descended into scuffles and shouting matches between parliament members.Fierce oppositionOpposition politicians on Thursday pushed and shoved in a failed bid to stop a committee from approving the bills.Abe has faced fierce criticism for his handling of the bills, and there are growing signs the campaign has taken a political toll.Opinion polls show the vast majority of Japanese are against the changes, and Abe’s once sky-high approval rating is dropping.Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets in almost daily rallies in a show of public anger on a scale rarely seen in Japan.On Friday, hundreds gathered again outside the parliament in Tokyo.

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Tags: Japan

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