Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday expressed his “strong indignation” after a US man working on a US military base in Okinawa was arrested on suspicion of abandoning the body of a woman who disappeared last month.
“I have no words to express, considering how the family feels,” Abe told reporters. “We urge the US side to take thorough measures to prevent the recurrence of such events.”
The arrest sparked outrage on Okinawa, where anti-US military sentiment is high because of a heavy US troop presence.
It could fuel further opposition to the relocation of a US Marine Corps air station on the southern Japanese island, a long-delayed project that Abe has been trying to push forward in the face of large protests.
Police said that Kenneth Shinzato, 32, was arrested on Thursday after he was questioned and investigators found the body at a location he provided, a forest in central Okinawa.
Investigators determined that the body is that of a 20-year-old woman missing since April 28, when she messaged her boyfriend that she was going for a walk.
Police said they suspect Shinzato was also responsible for her death. He has not been charged.
In Washington, US Department of Defense spokesman Peter Cook said the man arrested was a US military contractor.
“This is an appalling tragedy,” he said.
The US military extends its “deepest sympathies to the people of Japan, and express our gratitude for the trust that they place in our bilateral alliance and the American people,” he added.
Kyodo News Service said Shinzato used to be a marine.
US Department of State spokesman John Kirby said the US military was cooperating fully with local authorities in their investigation.
“This is a terrible tragedy and it’s obviously an outrage,” he told reporters in Washington.
Okinawa Governor Takeshi Onaga said he was “outraged” and that the death of the woman broke his heart.
“As I look back at all the developments to date, I’m simply speechless,” he said.
Onaga has spearheaded opposition to the relocation of US Marine Corps Air Station Futenma from a densely populated neighborhood in central Okinawa to another site on the island, saying the facility should be moved away from Okinawa instead.
Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Fumio Kishida summoned US Ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy to convey his “regret” over the crime.
Kennedy said: “Nothing that I can do or say will make up the loss or to bring her back, but I want to express to you my determination and that of my military colleagues to cooperate fully with Okinawan police and the Japanese government, and we will double our efforts to make sure this will never happen again.”
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