Forced eviction of homeless people starts at the Airin General Center site in Osaka’s Kamagasaki, even after its closure as a symbol of the area.
1@Old Man Friends Club ★ Security Guard [lv.9] [Sprout].Dec. 1, 2024 (Sun) 10:07:51.43ID:wBwk7OFF9
The Airin General Center has been the core of employment measures in Kamagasaki, Nishinari Ward, Osaka City, the largest town for day laborers in the country. Even after the facility, which was said to be a symbol of Kamagasaki, was closed, the forced eviction of people who had been sleeping rough on the premises began on the morning of the 1st. In May, the homeless people lost a lawsuit filed by Osaka Prefecture, which owns the land, demanding that the land be vacated. The prefecture filed a petition, and the Osaka District Court carried out the execution at around 7:00 a.m. on the 1st. An elderly man who has been sleeping rough in front of the center for several years said, “I have nowhere to go. What should I do now?” he said. After this, officials from Osaka Prefecture and city began preparing to surround the center with barricades. Asahi Shimbun 2024/12/01.
Why would they tear it down? They should just build a conservation center on the site. Some people have been there for decades. I wonder if they’ll redevelop that place.
These guys were stupid, they had plenty of time to prepare. Or rather, it’s the price they pay for running away from life itself. Everyone else studies hard, works hard, and gets a home. These guys just lived carelessly, so they ended up with no home and unstable day labor ( ✌︎’ω’)✌︎.
Now! It’s time for the human rights activists to step in!! Now is the time to make loads of money as the end of the year approaches and it’s our peak season!
If you live a normal life, you may be hungry, but it doesn’t mean you can’t even have a roof over your head… I wonder what kind of mistakes he’s made in the past.
It’s a great story that there are independent living centers and care centers that even provide free accommodation so why don’t these people want to go there? Are they subject to power harassment from other users or managers? The mass media should spread the word more about the fact that there is free accommodation.
If you’re dealing with foreigners it’s an international issue. Japanese homeless people are the weakest in Japan. They’re in a similar position to Asians in America.
The right wing is acting all nice like this. They’re just confiscating something that was barely a place to sleep, had its own cooperative relationships and economy, and was barely stable. Where will the people who were there go, and what will they do?
If they removed that, it would completely change the atmosphere, it would be much better, and the location is so good it might even turn out to be a better area.
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