There is a tendency for hate towards Kurds in Saitama to be “more prevalent among internet users than among local residents,” with YouTube influencing the threats and harassment Nomura Shoji .
Hate against Kurds is increasing in a town in southern Saitama Prefecture. Why were the Kurds targeted? From the October 14, 2024 issue of AERA.
Kawaguchi City in southern Saitama Prefecture. In this town, a Kurdish man (35) runs a restaurant, and a man’s abusive voice can be heard on the phone.
Harassing phone calls can ring all day long. In addition, people outside the store yelled at them to “get out of Japan,” and a YouTuber secretly filmed a video of them coming into the store and posting it online. To protect himself, the man began recording his phone calls and installed security cameras inside the store.
The Kurds are known as “the world’s largest ethnic group without a country.” They live in countries such as Turkiye and Syria in the Middle East, but because they are ethnic minorities, they suffer discrimination and oppression and have fled their homelands. It is said that there are 2,000 to 3,000 Kurds living in Japan. Most are from Turkiye, and many live in Kawaguchi City and neighboring Warabi City. Hate against Kurds is increasing in that town.
When the Kurdish man was 15 years old, he came to Japan to meet his father, who had come earlier. He had planned to come to Japan temporarily, but as ethnic discrimination worsened in Turkey, he decided to stay in Japan. At the age of 22, she got married, obtained a residence permit, and worked tirelessly to open her own shop. They have three children and have never had any trouble in their hometown. However, since last year, the surrounding environment has completely changed. the man says.
“A photo of my entire family was also posted on social media without permission.
Hate against Kurds became noticeable around last spring. At the time, a bill to amend the Immigration Control and Refugee Law that would have allowed forcible deportation of asylum seekers for the third time or more was being debated in the Diet, and when protests broke out in response, attention focused on the Kurds, who have a large number of asylum seekers. The big turning point was last July. There was an incident in Kawaguchi City where Kurds stabbed each other, and a scuffle broke out as relatives gathered at the hospital where the injured person was being taken. After this uproar, bashing against the Kurds quickly spread. Social media is full of false rumors and slander against the Kurdish people, and a “vigilante group” has been formed to restore the safety and security of Japanese people. Hate demonstrations and street propaganda are also frequent.
It is being done.https://dot.asahi.com/articles/-/236278?page=1
>>1
The media doesn’t report on the “Kurdish” opinion paper from Kawaguchi City Council, which Reiwa also approved
ps://www.sankei.com/article/20230730-h6piw4lz25o7lbzkrx6lt7ty34.
>>14
The leader of the vigilante group is from Tokyo and has no ties to the local area,
and the donation balance is unclear, so I don’t want to get involved.
The police are greatly at fault for not arresting everyone involved in the hospital disturbance and not taking any criminal action. It’s too late now to fix it.
If the residents were to speak up directly, it would be because they would be in danger. People who have lived for a long time are saying that they will move if they retire due to poor security.
Well, even if the locals are against it, they have to continue living there,
so they’re scared of retaliation and can’t speak out lol
But internet people can support from other regions, so it can’t be helped, right?
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