Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 Download this powerpoint presentation at: www.debito.org/ fortakaandmana121107. ppt.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 Download this powerpoint presentation at: www.debito.org/ fortakaandmana121107. ppt."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 1 Download this powerpoint presentation at: www.debito.org/ fortakaandmana121107. ppt

3 2 “FOR TAKA AND MANA” Race and Japan’s Judiciary A primer by ARUDOU Debito Associate Professor, Hokkaido Information University

4 3 (Amy (left) and Anna Sugawara Aldwinckle 1996) FOR AMY AND ANNA

5 4 DISCLAIMER I am not a qualified legal scholar. I am an activist. And my research and conclusions in this field are purposefully colored by my activism. That acknowledged, let’s continue:

6 5 Trends I am seeing in the J judiciary  Criminal Court cases where if it is NJ crime committed against Japanese, heavy punishment. But if it is Japanese on NJ crime, or NJ-NJ crime, lax judicial standards.  Civil Court cases where NJ winning is a crapshoot. Not a precedent based system.  Family Court cases where NJ winning is practically nonexistent, and NJ plaintiffs are at a severe disadvantage.

7 6 Criminal Court Cases  Idubor Case (2006-7): Nigerian yesterday sentenced to 3 years for alleged J rape despite no material evidence. www.debito.org/index.php/?p=831  Lucie Blackman Case (2006): J defendant acquitted of her rape, murder (life conviction on other rapes, murder). www.debito.org/index.php/?p=356

8 7 Criminal Court Cases  Valentine Case (2003-7): Police exonerated of responsibility despite denying medical care to injured Nigerian prisoner in their custody, who wound up crippled. www.debito.org/japantimes081407.html  Jane Doe Case (2002-7): Police refuse to charge anyone in alleged NJ rape of Australian woman, exonerated of police harassment of woman claimant. www.debito.org/index.php/?p=818

9 8 NJ disadvantages in Criminal Court Cases  Uncertified standards for courtroom/police translations.  Confessions extracted through unrecorded, torturous procedures, including language barrier.  “NJ shouldn’t be here anyway if they’re going to cause trouble” factor.  Convictions at 99% for everyone, but no chance of bail for NJ (seen as flight risk). Meaning freer hand for police interrogations.  NJ being singled out for racial profiling by police www.debito.org/whattodoif.html  NJ can commit more crimes than J (ex: J cannot commit visa violations, and NJ can be jailed long enough to run out visa, or have it cancelled)

10 9 Civil Court Cases  Ana Bortz Case (1998-9): Brazilian refused entry to “Japanese Only” jewelry store wins under UN treaty. www.jpri.org/publications/ workingpapers/wp88.html  Otaru Onsens Case (1999-2005): American, German, and naturalized J (guess who) win against “Japanese Only” bathhouse, lose against do-nothing Otaru City govt. www.debito.org/otarulawsuit.html

11 10 Civil Court Cases  McGowan Case (2004-6): African-American refused entry into eyeglass store, loses on technicality in lower court, wins on appeal. www.debito.org/mcgowanhanketsu.html  Kim Doe Case (2003-7): Zainichi Korean wins against exclusionary landlord after rental contract signed. www.debito.org/index.php/?p=831

12 11 Civil Court Cases  U Hoden Case (2000-2007): Daughter of naturalized Chinese and J bullied to the point of medically-certified PTSD, civil suit against parents of bullies. Decision due Dec 22, 2007. www.debito.org/index.php/?p=59

13 12 NJ disadvantages in Civil Court Cases  Not Japanese citizens, so kokumin grey protections of laws and Constitution can be exploited by defense/judges.  Problems put down to cultural issues, misunderstandings.  “Rational Discrimi- nation” holds water as legal argument.  Dearth of multilingual legal counsel.  Pressure to settle (wakai), avoid legal precedent or judgments.  Intense mediations not always explained.

14 13 Family Court Cases  Murray Wood Case: Plaintiff wins in Canadian courts, loses in J courts.  Not a single precedent of NJ being awarded custody.  More cases at www.crnjapan.com  Lawyer friend’s opinion: judiciary wants to keep J kids here due to low birth rate.

15 14 Disadvantages for NJ in Family Court Cases  NJ have no koseki (Family Registry), so not recognized as family unit to award children to.  NJ visas often dependent on marital status; can’t stay after divorce.  No real punishment for perjury--lies rampant, and native speakers are better liars.  Mediation process (choutei) long, arduous, no legal force, and must damn partner www.debito.org/ thedivorce.html  No joint custody, visitation rights & child support unenforced.

16 15 CONCLUSIONS  Japan’s divorce rate (95% of seekers are women) is now skyrocketing--rose 6.1% in April 2007 alone. www.debito.org/index.php/?p=823  Post-divorce Japan is a land of Deadbeat Dads and Fortress Moms.  Seeking protection through the Japanese judiciary will probably not work for NJ, so consider alternative methods.

17 16 CONCLUSIONS  Hague Convention on the Rights of the Child--not signed by Japan. But doesn’t matter. Is administrative thing, obfuscates--signing is merely housekeeping.  UN Convention on the Rights of the Child--Sec 9-- Japan has already signed. Guarantees visitation to both parents.  Japan’s judiciary is not independent. You can’t enforce laws properly and impartially when judges are employees of the State.  Not so much a matter of the parents’ rights--the child’s rights are being violated. Too often overlooked

18 17 More on this and other issues: www.debito.org ISBN 4 7503 9018 6 English version, Japanese version ISBN 4 7503 9001 9 THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR ATTENDING THIS PRESENTATION!

19 18 Download this powerpoint presentation at: www.debito.org/ fortakaandmana121107. ppt


Download ppt "1 Download this powerpoint presentation at: www.debito.org/ fortakaandmana121107. ppt."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google