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Craig
12-04-2002, 06:53 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-paci...fic/2541449.stm (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2541449.stm)

Wednesday, 4 December, 2002, 02:39 GMT

US marine in Japan 'attempted rape'

Japanese police have issued an arrest warrant for a US Marine Corps officer over the alleged attempted rape of a foreign woman. The alleged incident took place in Okinawa, a string of tiny islands at the southern tip of the Japanese archipelago that hosts 26,000 of the 48,000 US military personnel in the country.

No official US response has yet been given to the request to hand over the suspect, although the Reuters news agency reported that the US ambassador to Tokyo, Howard Baker, said he would cooperate with the investigation.

The woman was assaulted in a car at about 0130 local time on 2 November, a Japanese police spokesman said in the Okinawan capital, Naha.

"The man tried to rape a woman in a car. But he failed to accomplish his purpose because the woman resisted furiously," the spokesman reportedly said.

"Then the man threw her cell phone and broke it."

He would not give any other details about the woman.

Tense presence

The incident threatens to reignite Japanese anger over the behaviour of some US servicemen and the special treaty provisions for their treatment in cases where they are accused of criminal acts.

Resentment runs particularly high in Okinawa, which, despite making up less than 1% of the Japanese landmass, has hosted a large proportion of the US forces in Japan since the end of World War II.

In March, US airman Timothy Woodland was sentenced to 32 months in a Japanese prison for the June 2001 rape of a local woman.

But Washington's delay in handing him over to Japanese authorities once again stirred debate about the Status of Forces Agreement (Sofa) which governs the legal status of US troops in Japan.

The recent acquittal of US servicemen who ran over and killed two girls in Korea also sparked protests about the US military presence there. :angry:

loserbutt
12-04-2002, 07:06 PM
aren't the Okinawans also ethnically different from the rest of the Japanese population?

MellowDrama
12-04-2002, 07:33 PM
The woman is believed to be Filipina. This is a bit more "interesting" that 3 countries are involved here. Do the rules apply differently under the US-Japan agreement when the victim involved is neither Japanese nor American? :confused:

AliBabaIncorporated
12-04-2002, 08:44 PM
Originally posted by MellowDrama@Dec 5 2002, 11:33 AM
The woman is believed to be Filipina. This is a bit more "interesting" that 3 countries are involved here. Do the rules apply differently under the US-Japan agreement when the victim involved is neither Japanese nor American? :confused:
nope. Filipinos, unlike Americans, don't get any protection of extraterritoriality. Whether as victims or as offenders, they're considered like any other non-citizens in the eyes of the law and the joint treaties.

pfc beansprout
12-08-2002, 05:30 PM
and we (the U.S.) wonder why foreigners hate us(besides our foreign policy, of course)....i believe the rape inquiry/trial in korea was another example..they weren't even convicted (umm..could be wrong here..but i don't recall conviction in millitary courts-hence, the public outcry).... :pissed:

wylin
12-09-2002, 08:24 AM
actually the last major rape case in japan the serviceman was convicted of rape and sexual assualt, and sentenced to a much harsher sentence then japanese courts give for rape.

Commando_turned_MD
12-09-2002, 01:08 PM
Allege rape......

pfc beansprout
12-09-2002, 02:49 PM
come on now army commando..yes it is "alleged" rape..but if serviceman do not put themselves in these situations, they wouldn't hafta worry...you know the behaviors of the U.S. serviceman aren't quite choirboys overseas...

Hito
12-09-2002, 04:58 PM
This is insane.
How many times does this have to happen before the local authorities start beating the shit out of amerikkkan GI's when they cach them on top of some young women?

AliBabaIncorporated
12-10-2002, 08:36 AM
eh ... before we keep blatantly generalizing here it should be pointed out that US servicemen in Okinawa have a lower crime rate than the population at large. but the bad apples always get the most attention. sure the US military presence has negative effects. but it's hardly as though they're running wild screwing any girl they please without consequences.

pfc beansprout
12-10-2002, 08:44 AM
hmm..generally speakin, i'm not real sure about those statistics...the millitary has their own justice system, and penalizes differently and may skew the numbers. i am generalizing, don't get me wrong, but i'm just talking from my experiences hanging out-well, not hanging out, but working w/these clowns...many are racist, ignorant, sexist..you name it. but think about it...who they recruit: high school grads, MALE dominated, those who have few options, etc. not exactly the 'pick of the litter.' :cry:

-btw, yeah, i've second guessed my enlistment..over, and over...and over.... <_<

AliBabaIncorporated
12-10-2002, 08:50 AM
well, even if the statistics are skewed, there's still an impressive degree of restraint on the part of the young servicemen. If you compared the servicemen not just to the overall population but to their demographic counterparts (the "not exactly the pick of the litter" among Japanese - 18-24 y.o. undereducated rural Japanese males), I'm quite confident the servicemen have a lower rate of causing incidents.