Monday, July 06, 2009

Japan symbols conveyors: from skilled bureaucrats to cuties




The Kimono dressed lady on Kyoto Kamogawa river bank, a Japan symbolic promotion icon soon to evaporate? Not too fast, Japan psyche inclusive of esthetes tastes and attraction for power, as seen in struggles between policy makers - politicians - tycoons, has a name: "JB", the "Japanese Bureaucracy".

Here are the winners... Yasushi Akashi, Sadako Ogata , Koichiro Matsuura, and today Yukiya Amano, next chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency. These Japanese VIPs are some among famous names in the world diplomatic arena. Even mores surprising, the "Japanese cuties" play a role to promote Tokyo, added to the influential JP people network! Mission? Very possible: Convey Japan's view to the outsiders and convince them. I think I even heard a famous politician and former bureaucrat saying once: "Brainwash them." Now now...

Is Japan updating symbols of a traditional Japan (kimono, Fuji and cherry trees) to seduce by charm or by technological creature "Honda Asimo" promoted by ex Prime Minister Koizumi to his European counterparts? http://tinyurl.com/r268qp

The Korean Donga Ilbo has this interesting report on How Japanese civil servants - diplomats get appointed to strategic posts. It means how Japan navigates to pass the message from old values to updated concerns. 1 main reason of the JP extensive web on the world stage: a large "network, funding and capabilities."

Indeed. Japan’s economic power is capable of creating a wide human network on the global stage with a ministry, the Gaimusho, whose budget is seven billion U.S. dollars and has 2,200 officials in Japan and 3,300 abroad.

Therefore, with a large number of overseas personnel, Japan develops a quite efficient diplomatic system for a diplomacy backed by personnel, funds and back-up plans. "To take the top post at the world’s top nuclear watchdog this year, when the agency held its election for director-general, Tokyo allocated 16 billion yen (167 million dollars) for projects on arms control, nonproliferation and the peaceful use of nuclear power."

And sometimes, Japan assigns "Lolita-esque fashion models boasting girlish tastes", (JT June 16th quotes) such as the recent 3 "ambassadors of cute" appointed by the Foreign Ministry who have started traveling abroad to introduce Japanese "pop culture" to young people overseas. Even if some people have been raising eyebrows over the use of "kawaii" as the culture campaign's latest buzzword such as Parliament Member Kaori Maruya, a Diet member from New Komeito.

Get the know-how, here is the Donga Ilbo report: http://lnk.nu/english.donga.com/xtd.php3
Not as prominent as the "Enigma of Japanese Power", worked out by our senior colleague Karen van Wolferen, thanks to ministries frivolities and rivalries. But good pointers.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Quand des régimes autoritaires et des "cartels" bâillonnent la presse ✍


Bilingual message EN & FR

Here is an extract of our FCCJ Board's message which I co-signed yesterday. I want to believe that Thai authorities will come to reasonable solution:

"The Board of Directors of the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan [FCCJ] is appalled to learn that the entire board of the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand (FCCT) has been accused of committing lese majeste, a crime that carries a maximum prison sentence of 15 years. The FCCJ is also gravely concerned that in the recent past the Thai authorities have used the country's lese majeste laws to restrict freedom of expression and have otherwise abused it for its own political ends. The Board of the FCCJ is dismayed by reports that the 13-member Board of the FCCT will be investigated by police after a complaint was filed by a freelance translator." The entire communique http://www.fccj.or.jp/node/4708

Mais les obstacles au travail de journaliste ce n'est pas seulement une question de régime autoritaire, c'est aussi une affaire de cartel qui s'en donne a coeur joie! A l'occasion des reprises estivales des grands sujets de l'année, on peut relire ce papier: (17 Novembre 2008 sur Asian Gazette)

"Les "cartels" de la presse d'agence à l'heure d'Internet."
Des géants de l'édition et des médias broient des journalistes.

Friday, July 03, 2009

"Yonaguni": Japanese troops pondering over East China Sea


According to the Tokyo Shimbun, a well informed newspaper, Japan's defense ministry is studying deploying troops on an island in the East China Sea near a group of islets that is claimed by Tokyo, Beijing and Taipei: "it could be included in the planned year-end revision of the basic defense program".

Objective: to send an army unit to Yonaguni island. Yonaguni is located 120 kilometers east of Taiwan and 170 kilometers south of uninhabited islands known as the Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese.

The MOD said the location of military deployments along a chain of islands between the southern tip of Japan's Kyushu island and Taiwan is "an important factor in the nation's defense deployment."

For the Tokyo Shimbun this strategy is part of Japan's shift of its defense focus from its northern borders during the Cold War era to the country's southwestern borders facing China.




✍ Yonaguni is Japan's southern island
JP:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPCq3yo4SLc with an underwater ruins formation some say thousands of years old which attract a lot of divers; it looks like ancient building or pyramid with undersea terraces less than 40 meters deep. A local diver first noticed the Yonaguni formations in 1986. Spectacular pictures and story here http://tinyurl.com/3ckoy2