Wow read this

Dead

New member
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/0809cr08.htm

Greater gun use puts bystanders in line of fire


Harumi Hoshi Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

A shooting incident Monday involving more than 10 armed gang members, who attacked the office of a right-wing organization in central Tokyo, killing two people and wounding five others, showed that guns are now becoming more of a threat to the lives of ordinary citizens.

However, although the number of guns in the possession of gangs is believed to have increased in recent years, police have been confiscating fewer firearms.

This indicates that current efforts to prevent guns and other weapons from falling into the hands of the underworld organizations are ineffective.

Recently, there has also been a tendency among organized gangs, which have been hampered from engaging in money-making activities by the Antigang Law, to hook up with or take over right-wing organizations to start businesses, such as debt collection agencies.

Is Japan's reputation as one of the safest nations in the world an illusion?

The number of guns confiscated by police in the first half of this year dropped by 93 from the same period last year to 413, the National Police Agency said.

"Confiscating firearms has become more and more difficult because weapons are being hidden in a skillful and organized way," a police official said.

The number of guns confiscated by police peaked at 1,880 in 1995 and has gradually decreased by 100 to 200 a year. Last year, police confiscated 1,001 guns, representing a 53 percent drop from 1995.

Last year, police discovered 18 sites where gangs had stored weapons, far below the 33 places found in 1996.

By contrast, the number of shooting incidents involving gang members has increased from 108 in 1996 to 133 last year.

"Guns have proliferated among rank-and-file gang members and they are less hesitant about using them," a police investigator said.

A longstanding feud between Yamaguchi-gumi and Kokusui-kai--organized gangs that staged a shoot-out in Shinjuku Ward, Tokyo, in June last year--highlights that tendency.

The feud then erupted into a further 16 violent episodes in Tokyo and five prefectures, including one in which a member of an organization affiliated with Yamaguchi-gumi fired four shots at the office of a Kokusui-kai-affiliated organization in Ginza, Tokyo. The shooting occurred in broad daylight, with crowds of shoppers walking nearby.

On several occasions, ordinary citizens have been unwittingly caught in the middle of shoot-outs between gang members.

In February 1990, a 53-year-old self-employed manager of an employment agency was fatally shot by a gang member, who mistook the victim for a member of a rival gang.

In June 1990, a 66-year-old former employee of NTT Corp. in Osaka was shot to death and in November 1990, a 19-year-old night school student suffered the same fate, after both of them were mistaken for gang members by other gang members.

In August 1997, a high-ranking member of Yamaguchi-gumi was fatally shot in a hotel coffee shop in Kobe. A dentist, who was in the coffee shop at the time of the shooting, was hit by a stray bullet and died of the gunshot wounds a week later.

In addition, there have been many cases in which ordinary citizens have been the targets of shooting attacks.

In April, a 60-year-old former manager of Suntory Ltd. and his 55-year-old wife were shot to death by a 51-year-old man, who was a former employee of the company.

Twenty-six people were killed or injured in shootings in the six months from January to June.

The number of robberies in which guns were used in the period also increased to 63 from 47 in the same period last year, representing a 34 percent increase.

One of the reasons for the proliferation of guns is that organized gangs, which have lost some of the sources of their income, have begun selling guns to ordinary citizens.

"As for the current situation, we have not yet found an effective way to deal with the dangerous tendency (of increasing gun use)," a police official said.

Copyright 2000 The Yomiuri Shimbun

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Dead [Black Ops]
 
Wow. Criminals acquire guns and use them in criminal acts. Boy ... you could knock me over with a feather.


Perhaps Japan's pomposity about violence will fade as rapidly as their alleged superiority in business.

[No, this isn't Japan bashing ... I simply get tired of having Japan and other (less successful) industrialized nations often presented as examples of how the U.S. should function.]

Live and let live. Regards from AZ
 
"This indicates that current efforts to prevent guns and other weapons from falling into the hands of the underworld organizations are ineffective."

It looks like reporters from the Washington Post, LA/NY Times, et al could take lessons in candor from reporter Yomiuri.

I will lay odds you will NEVER see honesty like that from a liberal newspaper (but then that's not news either).

BTW, Dead, is this from an English edition? When I go to the home page, it's in Japanese.

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"The night is nearly over; the day is almost here. So let us put aside
the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light." (Romans 13:12)

[This message has been edited by Oatka (edited August 10, 2000).]
 
Japan is a nation of sheeple. Nonconformity is a crime there, simply having a tattoo is frowned upon. The country religion was/is where the emporer is "god". Makes it easier to convince folks to go on suicide missions. Individualism is frowned upon too. I don't understand those who hold Japan up as an example of how the US should be.
 
Things can get pretty wild over here. Just yesterday some poor woman was hacked to death by some maniac armed with a hatchet. This in a coffee shop!
 
An interesting example of the differences in reporting styles between Japan and the U.S.
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5663-2000Aug10.html

By Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, August 11, 2000; Page A17

TOKYO –– A crowd gathered as the sound of gunplay boomed across a downtown business district here Monday, and bloody gangsters tumbled out of an office building. In their trademark dark suits and aloha shirts, the mafiosi barked into cell phones and charged back up the stairs to return to the fray; one grabbed two golf clubs from a car to add to his arsenal, witnesses said.

It was street theater for the crowd. Gunfire is rare here, and the perception that only gangsters use guns added to a surreal sense of safety among the onlookers, as though the mobsters were actors removed from reality. That two men died in the gunfight was simply a cost of doing business in Japan's yakuza underworld.

But Monday's shootout, which erupted after 15 yakuza members went to the offices of a right-wing organization to collect debts, served as a reminder to more sober observers that guns play a role in Japan's rising rate of violent crime.

Although Japan has some of the developed world's most stringent gun restrictions, the number of serious crimes committed with handguns here last year was the highest since the National Police Agency began keeping such statistics more than a decade ago. And the rate of gun crimes in the first six months of 2000 promises to exceed that record.

"I think the public believes it is safe in Japan," said Koichi Sunada, head of a citizens' anti-gun group in Tokyo. "But the situation is changing."

Japan takes comfort that its incidence of violent crime is still minuscule compared with the United States. But comparison with the First World's most violent country is not the only valid one; Japan's murder rate is higher than that of England or Australia, for example.

Guns remain a small factor in the violence. Japanese police say 158 felonies were committed with handguns here in 1998, compared to 364,776 felonies with firearms in the United States, according to the latest FBI figures available. Most gun crimes here involve yakuza members, who flout the police and laws to carry firearms as a badge of their profession. But increasingly, guns are getting into the hands of the general public, police say.
Last April in Kawasaki City, for example, police were called to the home of Kentaro Ohashi, a 55-year-old executive, where they found the bodies of three gunshot victims.
Takashi Kubo, 51, who had worked for Ohashi, nursed a three-year-old grudge about a job transfer, according to police. He retired, still angry, and took a trip to Singapore, Hong Kong and the United States, apparently smuggling two revolvers back into Japan. Kubo took them to Ohashi's house, shot the man's wife at the door and Ohashi in the bathroom, then took his own life.

"My ex-boss changed my life's course, so I will change his life's course," Kubo wrote in a note found next to his body, police said.

"Since 1994 or 1995, there's been a clear change; the guns are now becoming dispersed in the population," said Hiroyuki Fujimura, a senior superintendent in the Firearms Division of the National Police Agency.
A growing number of robberies accounts for the sharpest rise in handgun crimes, he said: "We are worried about it. Crimes are becoming more violent, more serious. And handguns are very efficient weapons for that."

Japan's gun control laws are legendarily tough and date back to 1588, just four decades after the first firearms arrived from Portugal. Simple possession of a handgun and one bullet carries a prison term of three to 15 years, and other laws have been toughened three times since 1991. Virtually no one except soldiers and police may carry handguns legally; even armored car guards are unarmed, and police officers leave their weapons in a safe at the station when they go off duty.

A citizen can buy a hunting rifle, but only after an exhaustive process that includes a lengthy waiting period and a police investigation of the potential buyer's background. Gun owners overwhelmingly support the tough laws; the Japanese are perplexed at American toleration of easy access to weapons in the face of widespread violence.

The yakuza are the exception. Experts believe most of the estimated 80,000 underworld members have weapons, and police have been unable or unwilling to dent that figure.

The yakuza have long held a curious place in Japanese society. Flamboyantly visible--they wear lavish tattoos and revel in their stereotype gangster appearances--they face little interference from police in running such traditional underworld businesses as drug dealing, prostitution and gambling.

Some people believe the police are corrupt; others say they are simply cautious, said Hiroyoshi Ishikawa, a professor of social psychology at Tokyo's Seijo University. "We have a proverb here that says if you keep your distance from the devil he can do nothing to you," Ishikawa said. That worked as long as the yakuza kept to an unwritten social pact that they would not harm
"average" citizens.

"But now, there is a kind of generation shift occurring within the yakuza," Ishikawa said. "The younger generation violates the principle; they are much more dangerous."

Monday's gunfight erupted in the offices of Sofusha, ostensibly a right-wing political group known mostly for parading with nationalist slogans blasting through loudspeakers mounted on ominous-looking black buses. Sofusha and some other right-wing groups have close ties to the yakuza, and it is clear they were as heavily armed as their visitors. Two yakuza members were killed and four wounded; just one Sofusha member was shot.

"To have a shooting here was beyond my imagination," said Shiro Kino****a, 76, who owns a shop and several offices in the group of buildings where the battle occurred. "When they come to sign a lease, they are properly dressed and well-behaved, and it's hard to know if they are right-wing or yakuza. This was a safe place, but not anymore."

To evade gun laws, yakuza members are thought to be placing their guns in the hands of non-yakuza associates. Last May, police said they arrested a 53-year-old executive who had hidden a gun for a yakuza friend in the hollowed-out pages of a law book on a bedroom bookshelf in his mansion. This year, police also confiscated guns concealed in abandoned cars and in the mattress of a sailor trying to smuggle them into Japan.

In fact, the number of seized guns has dropped steadily in the past five years, from a 1995 high of 1,880 to to 1,001 last year, mostly because they are being hidden better, experts say. About 42 percent of the seizures last year were from ordinary citizens.

The number of shootings reported to police also has dropped--from 241 in 1991 to 162 last year--a result, police say, of increased law enforcement pressure on the yakuza. But in an ominous contradiction, the number of serious crimes committed with handguns--either fired or displayed--has been on the rise, reaching 170 last year, a 30 percent increase in the last decade.

"In Japan, it used to be said that oxygen and safety were free. Is it becoming an illusion?" asked the daily Yomiuri Shimbun.
Keiji Oda, leader of Japan's 280 Guardian Angels, said that in the five years the group has been patrolling three of Tokyo's sleaziest districts, they have seen many things--but no guns.

Still, he said, he senses a rising level of crime and violence. "Five years ago, when we started, I didn't think patrolling and facing crime on the streets would be a big part of what we do," said Oda, 28, who imported the Guardian Angels concept of highly visible civilian patrols from New York. "On our patrols, we would only find an occasional drunk fighting a drunk.

"Now we see prostitution, drugs," he said. "We see a dramatic change on the streets. It's gotten meaner. You don't see many guns here, but what we're worried about is the apathy of citizens to what's going on in their community. Things are changing."
Special correspondent Shigehiko Togo contributed to this report.

© 2000 The Washington Post Company
 
You reap what you sow. (sp?) No guns more violence.

Ask the sheeple in England and Australia.


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" Stupidity " Strange as it may seem, no amount of learning can cure stupidity, and formal education positively fortifies it.
( Stephen Vizinczey, 1933 )
 
Did you notice in the lead story that a guy 53 and a guy 66 were mistaken for members of a rival gang ? Even the old farts are "bangin'".

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TOM
SASS AMERICAN LEGION NRA GOA
 
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