LEts hear it from BBC news

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Oct 9, 2003
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Japan racism 'deep and profound'
By Chris Hogg
BBC News, Tokyo

Japanese commuters, Tokyo
Only about 1% of Japan's population is registered as foreign
An independent investigator for the UN says racism in Japan is deep and profound, and the government does not recognise the depth of the problem.

Doudou Diene, a UN special rapporteur on racism and xenophobia, was speaking at the end of a nine-day tour of the country.

He said Japan should introduce new legislation to combat discrimination.

Mr Diene travelled to several Japanese cities during his visit, meeting minority groups and touring slums.



Japan mulls multicultural dawn


He said that although the government helped to organise his visit, he felt many officials failed to recognise the seriousness of the racism and discrimination minorities suffered.

He was also concerned that politicians used racist or nationalist themes, as he put it, to whip up popular emotions. He singled out the treatment of ethnic Koreans and Chinese and indigenous tribes.

Mr Diene says he plans to recommend that Japan enact a law against discrimination, which he said should be drawn up in consultation with minority groups.

He said he would now wait for the Japanese government to respond to his comments before submitting a report to the United Nations.
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They wanted that seat on the Security Council soooo baaaad!
They thought they deserved it because they are "leaders in the world"
I knew that getting a seat would mean getting civil rights and all those other watchdogs up the Japanese behind!
This is great!
I cant wait to see all those "no tattoos" signs come down...
 
I just finished reading The Rape of Nanking, maybe they'll finally get their heads on straight...
I may be visiting Niigata next year, a friend of mine is teaching for the JET program.
 
I profoundly distrust the UN and its special rapporteurs; and anything the UN says about racism and not recognising the depth of the problem is truly ironic.

The Japanese have a difficult history and their current demographics are very different from much of the world, but they are not the cause of the world's problems today, and this UN report looks like typical bureaucratic meddling to me.
 
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