
CLOSE THE BASE is brought to you by the Institute for Policy Studies: Ideas into Action for Peace, Justice, and the Environment.
About the Campaign
We support the unconditional closure of the U.S. Marine Corps base at Futenma and oppose the construction of other U.S. bases in Okinawa. (read more)Follow Us!
Twitter
Take Action
Tags
American Friends Service Committee Ann Wright April 25, 2010 Rally biodiversity Carl Levin Center for Biological Diversity Chalmers Johnson democracy Democratic Party of Japan Doug Bandow dugong Fellowship of Reconciliation films Foreign Policy in Focus Futenma Gavan McCormack Global Day of Action on Military Spending (GDAMS) Governor Nakaima Hatoyama Henoko human rights Institute for Policy Studies Japan-U.S. Citizens for Okinawa (JUCON) Jim Webb John Feffer Jon Mitchell Maher Affair military spending Nago Network for Okinawa Obama Okinawa Satoko Norimatsu Save the Dugong Campaign Center Susumu Inamine Sympathy Budget Takae The Asia Pacific Journal Tokunoshima U.S. military accidents & crimes US for Okinawa V-22 Osprey WaPo advertisement Wikileaks Yanbaru ForestArchives





16 Years after the Abduction-Beating-Rape of a 12-year-old Okinawan Girl by 2 U.S. Marines & a Sailor “just for fun”
following gang rape of a 12-year-old girl by U.S. servicemen in Okinawa)
Despite the admiral’s resignation and expressions of remorse by the White House, rapes of Okinawan women by U.S. troops have continued: In 2001, an Air Force sergeant was arrested for publicly raping a 20-year-old Okinawan woman on the hood of a car. In 2002, Okinawan authorities took into custody a Marine major for sexually assaulting a Filipina server outside an officer’s club. In 2003, military police handed over to Okinawan police a marine who broke a 19-year-old woman’s nose and raped her. In 2005, an Air Force sergeant molested a 10-year-old Okinawan girl on her way to Sunday school. He claimed innocence, but police found a photo of the girl’s naked body on his cell phone.
This 1995 report from L.A. Times staff writer Teresa Watanabe graphically reminds us of the violence and emotional trauma the U.S. military presence has brought to Okinawa for almost seven decades:
Read the entire 1995 article here.