Japan’s top court on Tuesday ruled in favor of a government plan to relocate a US military base on the island of Okinawa, dealing a blow to islanders’ efforts to get rid of the base altogether.
The government and Okinawa authorities have been at loggerheads for years over the US Marines’ Futenma air base, as resentment has simmered among residents who bemoan what they see as an unfair burden in supporting the US military presence in Japan.
Okinawa Governor Takeshi Onaga has led the campaign to get the base off the island, while the central government has proposed moving it away from the urban area where it is located to a less populated part of the island, Henoko.
As part of his campaign, Onaga rescinded approval for land reclamation work, issued by his predecessor, to clear the way for the base relocation, but the Japanese High Court ruled his decision illegal and on Tuesday the Japanese Supreme Court upheld that ruling.
The Japanese Ministry of Defense, which is overseeing the plan to relocate the base, said it would resume work as soon as it was officially cleared to go ahead.
“We plan to do our utmost for the transfer of the Futenma air base to Henoko to prevent the air base from becoming fixed at the current location and to remove the danger posed by the base,” Japanese Minister of Defense Tomomi Inada said in a statement.
The US Department of State applauded the ruling.
“We welcome the decision by the Japanese Supreme Court,” US Department of State spokesman John Kirby said. “The United States and Japan remain committed ... to the plan to construct the Futenma replacement facility at the Camp Schwab-Henoko area and adjacent waters.”
The Futenma air base is surrounded by schools, hospitals and shops, and residents worry about air crashes. Crime by US service personnel has also on occasion inflamed anger.
A US military tilt-rotor MV-22 Osprey aircraft came down in the sea off Okinawa last week.
Onaga has said that he would maintain his opposition to the relocation of the facility to the site of the Camp Schwab Marine Corp base.
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