SNA Visible Minorities Col 6: “Carlos Ghosn’s Escape from Japan Was the Right Move”, Jan 20, 2020 (UPDATED with full text)

mytest

Books, eBooks, and more from Debito Arudou, Ph.D. (click on icon):
Guidebookcover.jpgjapaneseonlyebookcovertextHandbook for Newcomers, Migrants, and Immigrants to Japan「ジャパニーズ・オンリー 小樽入浴拒否問題と人種差別」(明石書店)sourstrawberriesavatardebitopodcastthumbFodorsJapan2014cover
UPDATES ON TWITTER: arudoudebito
DEBITO.ORG PODCASTS on iTunes, subscribe free
“LIKE” US on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/debitoorg
https://www.facebook.com/embeddedrcsmJapan
http://www.facebook.com/handbookimmigrants
https://www.facebook.com/JapaneseOnlyTheBook
https://www.facebook.com/BookInAppropriate
If you like what you read and discuss on Debito.org, please consider helping us stop hackers and defray maintenance costs with a little donation via my webhoster:
Donate towards my web hosting bill!
All donations go towards website costs only. Thanks for your support!

Hi Blog.  Here’s my latest column from the Shingetsu News Agency.  Enjoy.  Debito Arudou, Ph.D.

//////////////////////////////////////////////

Visible Minorities: Carlos Ghosn’s Escape from Japan Was the Right Move

http://shingetsunewsagency.com/2020/01/20/visible-minorities-carlos-ghosns-escape-from-japan-was-the-right-move/

SNA (Tokyo) — I have to admit more than a twinge of sympathy for Carlos Ghosn’s Great Escape.

Ghosn, the former CEO of Nissan, Mitsubishi, and Renault, was arrested in November 2018 on the initial suspicion of falsifying his compensation levels, and subjected to more than a year of Japan’s “hostage justice.” That is, he was held hostage to a judicial system that detains you until you confess to a crime, and subjects you to days, weeks, months, or conceivably even years of interrogation and tortuous conditions until you crack. Understandably, most do crack, and Japan’s conviction rate after indictment is famously more than 99%.

But as you have probably heard, at the end of December Ghosn suddenly turned up in Lebanon, one of three places he has citizenship. Out on bail in Japan, he made a daring escape that people are still trying to piece together, including man-sized musical instrument cases, an uncharacteristic lack of Japanese border security, and a mysterious visit to Lebanon’s president by Japan’s state minister for foreign affairs mere days before Ghosn jumped bail.

Ghosn is now making good on his threat to expose everything that happened to him while in custody. His multilingual press conference in Beirut two weeks ago was breathtaking to watch, full of documentation, pointed fingers, and hot-tongued accusations of the human rights denied to Japan’s incarcerated.

This has been covered exhaustively worldwide, so what more is there to say? My perspective comes as a person who also tried to change Japanese rules and practices, and found that The System similarly fought back dirty.

I’m talking about the Otaru Hot Springs Case.  In 1999, some friends and I challenged Japan’s lack of a law against racial discrimination, as manifest in signs up on businesses nationwide saying “Japanese Only.” Places with these “no foreigners allowed” rules included public bathhouses, restaurants, shops, bars, public facilities, and even hotels, schools, hospitals, realtors, and other public services essential to life in Japan.  People were (and still are) arbitrarily being refused service because they “look foreign” to proprietors, and that includes allegedly “foreign-looking” Japanese citizens.

We first took several exclusionary cases to the court of public opinion, where we had some initial victories (signs coming down and the rules changed).  But soon Japanese media began putting up resistance (similar to what Ghosn noted in his press conference) to reasoned, informed, and factual public debate.

It’s all described in detail in my book “Japanese Only” (ebook available for a buck on Amazon), but some of the media strategies we faced were similar, including:

  1. Media quoting the proponents of the exclusionary status quo at length, less so the arguments of the critics;
  2. Media portraying the proponents as somehow pitiable, as “keepers of the faith” in “traditional Japan.”  Exclusions by physical appearance were soon construed as essentially normal, regular, or even necessary practices that keep Japanese in business;
  3. Media portraying the critics as “Japan bashers,” “Japan haters”, and generally “anti-Japan.”  Moreover, since foreigners were involved in the issue:
  4. Media portraying the issue of as a matter of “cultural misunderstandings by foreigners who don’t understand Japan” and “outsiders and guests disrespectfully telling poor old Japan what to do.”

After that, public debate almost completely elided the issue of racism.  The consequences were that issues of fair and equal treatment under the law were mooted, which affected the judicial outcome when we eventually took this case to court.

This enabling of exclusionism also empowered the militant “netto-uyo” (internet right-wing trolls) to inject anger, fear and loathing into the debate.  Then came the hate mail and death threats (which I still get to this day) to our homes, neighborhoods and workplaces.  With this came the hairy eyeballs from our neighbors and colleagues, meaning it was now somehow our fault for causing all this trouble.  Thus by standing up for our rights, we had brought all this upon ourselves.

Point is, I think Ghosn and I would have a lot to talk about.

Granted, there are caveats to this comparison.  Ghosn’s is a criminal case and ours was civil.  We were not arrested, fired from our jobs (luckily), or put in jail for months.

But I really get Ghosn.  I understand why he decided to do a runner.  It wasn’t just because he was denied access to his wife for months as a means to break him down psychologically.  It wasn’t just because prosecutors have decisive power over the evidence (even exculpatory evidence) submitted to court.  It wasn’t just because they decided to have separate trials for each charge, and the first trial would probably begin in 2021 and then take years.  And it wasn’t just because there is a separate and unequal jurisprudential track for foreigners than for Japanese (as detailed in my book “Embedded Racism”, Chapter 6).

It was that given this level of legalized bullying over the accused in Japan, Ghosn knew he wouldn’t get a fair trial with the presumption of innocence—neither in the courtroom nor in the court of public opinion.  And he was exactly right.

Even Japan’s Justice Minister demanded Ghosn return and “prove his innocence.”  That was not a gaffe.  That’s exactly the system in Japan.  And he would never be able to prove it when the courts and media follow the same presumption:  you got arrested, so you must have done something wrong to bring The System down upon yourself.  You’ll never get a fair hearing because your side will not be heard.  Not within Japan, anyway.  Especially as a foreigner.

I am aware that Ghosn’s skipping bail like this means foreigners will probably never be granted bail again.  (Then again, almost no foreigners are anyway.)   I am also aware that becoming a fugitive from justice just makes you look guiltier.  Moreover, the fact that Ghosn could actually escape is testament to his level of privilege, unlike the multitudes of suspects, foreign and Japanese, caught in the wringer without the wherewithal and connections to flee.

But there is no other way but Ghosn for Japan’s judicial excesses to finally be brought to light in the international arena.  I care less about one rich man’s escaping justice for possible white-collar crimes than about all the innocent people taken hostage by Japan’s unfettered police and sadistic prosecutors, who are less interested in finding the truth than in losing face by losing a case.

For too long now, Japan has gotten a free pass for its human rights abuses and torture of suspects.  Ghosn is in the best position possible to blow the lid off this system and bring international pressure for reforms.

Ghosn can clear his name for his personal benefit if he likes.  But as long as he winds up improving conditions for others incarcerated in Japan, I say support him in this quest.  Let’s see if he can reform Japan’s vicious criminal justice system when we couldn’t reform Japan’s racist social justice system.

ENDS

======================
Do you like what you read on Debito.org?  Want to help keep the archive active and support Debito.org’s activities?  Please consider donating a little something.  More details here. Or if you prefer something less complicated, just click on an advertisement below.

49 comments on “SNA Visible Minorities Col 6: “Carlos Ghosn’s Escape from Japan Was the Right Move”, Jan 20, 2020 (UPDATED with full text)

  • David Markle says:

    Here are some highlights of an article that appeared recently in the JT. It underlines the points Debito makes in his excellent AND article:

    “According to the Mainichi Shimbun, as of January 2019, there were 1,246 individuals being held in immigration detention facilities in Japan, which has no amnesty system wherein foreign nationals are allowed to stay in the country.

    This situation was illustrated in a Dec. 19 article on Harbor Business Online by Asahi Oda about a Filipino woman named Emelita, who spent more than three years in detention.

    According to the Tokyo Shimbun, as of June last year, 332 foreign nationals had disappeared while on provisional release from immigration detention, up from 96 in 2014, presumably because they feared being detained again without explanation. The big difference, however, is that many of these fugitives remain in Japan.”

    https://tinyurl.com/tl8cuxa

    Reply
    • So draconian detention is having the effect of causing more detainees to ‘disappear’ when they get out. Should cause some kind of review of a failing system, but TIJ so more likely to cause sucking of teeth and a doubling-down on a failing policy. Expect numbers to continue increasing.

      Reply
  • Good article.

    I really liked how you summarized the phenomenon of “gaslighting” that foreigner issues can be subjected to: unequal media coverage, discriminators as sympathetic underdogs, the 反日 Japan-bashing card, and “outsiders telling us what to do!” instead of equal treatment under the law.

    Reply
  • Justice Ministry completely denies the phenomenon of “hostage justice”, without any awareness of how the laws are abused by police. Naturally”

    Ministry rebuts accusations of ‘hostage justice’ in Japan
    JIJI, REUTERS, JAN 22, 2020
    https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/01/22/national/crime-legal/japanese-justice-ministry-rebuts-hostage-justice-criticism/

    The Justice Ministry published explanatory information about the nation’s justice system on its website on Tuesday, rebutting international criticism of Japan’s prosecutorial approach.

    The system has been described as “hostage justice,” most particularly in the wake of former Nissan Motor Co. Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s flight from the country following his prolonged detention.

    The explanatory information is offered as 14 sets of questions and answers, and is available in both Japanese and English.

    In a question about arguments claiming Japan’s system is a form of hostage justice, the ministry said the system “does not force confessions by unduly holding suspects and defendants in custody.”

    “It is therefore not accurate at all to criticize the Japanese system as being a ‘hostage justice’ system,” the ministry added…

    Rest of the boilerplate at https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/01/22/national/crime-legal/japanese-justice-ministry-rebuts-hostage-justice-criticism/

    Link to the site in question at
    http://www.moj.go.jp/EN/hisho/kouhou/20200120enQandA.html

    Reply
    • Jim Di Griz says:

      ‘Your criminal justice system is barbaric.’
      ‘No it’s not. Stop being so unfair!’
      Yeah, great comeback. That’s gonna win people over for sure.
      Love the way every J-scandal got weeks of notice of prosecutors raids so they could shred evidence, whilst Ghosn gets locked up for over a year to stop him ‘tampering with evidence’.

      Reply
    • David Markle says:

      “Justice Ministry completely denies the phenomenon of “hostage justice”, without any awareness of how the laws are abused by police. ”

      I would hypothesize that the JM is well aware of how the police abuse the law, but are in fact powerless to do much, if anything to compel them to do what they don’t want to do. They are independent fiefdoms that operate in grudging antagonism of each other, like many entities in Japan that logically would have a superior/subservient relationship, but in fact are like a dysfunctional couple who live in the same house, but sleep in separate rooms and only interact when it is in their own interest to do so.

      — I also think there is the aspect of “doing your job” to keep crime rates nominally low. That’s a big point of nationalism in Japan. For if crime goes up, MOJ takes the fall. Hence the freer hand granted to police to keep rates low by whatever means necessary.

      Reply
      • David Markle says:

        It’s been a while since I read it, but I believe your book “Embedded Racism” has very good examples of cases regarding police abuse.
        Recommended reading.

        Reply
  • One tiny little step forward, then take two steps backward.

    Reichsfurher Aso makes yet another Nazi slogan remark and no one cares.

    As the poster Baudrillard has suggested a few times, every action in Japan is but a relationship between symbols and images. Actions and interactions without any real thought or meaning aside from “hey, its cool”, “recognize the native people’s works for good PR”.

    Then the next day everything is forgotten and back to good old nationalism of praising glorius nippon and the divine pure Japanese race while bashing NJ.

    As we can see, a possible new wave of “No Gaijin!” signs in stores is comming back with a vengence.

    https://www.newsweek.com/japanese-shop-owner-ban-chinese-tourists-coronavirus-1483420

    Even though the owner said “no chinese allowed”, he is being very vague. Basically any asian that speaks chinese will be banned, including Japanese citizens of chinese decent who can speak chinese.
    If there is anything to be learned about Japanese racists, is that they only care about race not nationality, so this sign applies even if you are American, Singaporean, simply being an asian guy who can speak chinese, whatever, the owner will kick you out if you are caught simply speaking chinese. Japan doesn’t care where you are from.

    Despite complaints the store owner has recieved, the owner is adamant on justifying his xenophobic sign based on the new SARS disease fears. An apologist also commented in the news article that it is only one store to downplay Japan’s xenophobia.

    Actually if you read the article a second time, the owner has always hated NJ and is now admiting to it and believes that he has found a good reason to put up a no gaijin sign by using the SARs epidemic as an excuse and cushion from scrutiny. The article says it is one store but I feel more “no gaijin” signs are going to show up in the future.

    Xenophobia has become something of a national sport, especially in entertainment and there are no reprucussions for it. All those anti-racist laws that where put up are all bark and no bite.

    The justice system? From analyzing the story of Carlos Ghosn, it seems as if the Japanese “justice” system is only designed to protect the powerful elite and to crush opposition instead of protecting the working class, women and minorities. Anyone not a rich powerful wajin and male with the right connections to the powerful elite are guaranteed to be screwed with this 99% conviction rate system.

    Given how swiftly Japan is at the ready to throw NJ under the bus at moments notice, I doubt these “recognize Japan as multi-racial” messages hold any meaning, just like how some J-politicians would “apologize” to its neighbors for the war and then follow up by visiting Yasukuni and supporting ultranationalists and rewriting history textbooks.

    Anyone remember the Fukushima scandal? Immediately following that is a hate-china wave where all the media suddenly turn focus on the senkaku island crisis and everyone was expecting a all out hot war. Nothing came out of that and Fukushima is forgotten, LDP PR saved from having to face scrutiny for their incompetence with the nuclear cleanup. Instead support for the far-right increased.

    Japan Inc. is in hot seat yet again now, with Carlos Ghosn free and Japan’s reputation as a fair and just democracy at stake. Instead of having to deal with criticism about its justice system, Japan can seize on China’s SARs crisis and go on a full offensive labeling NJ as dangerous and disease infested and needs to be strictly controlled.

    I would not overlook this incident as just one store not wanting NJ, it feels like yet another volcano that is ready to explode. It is all 2012 again. Knowing Japan, I find that anti-chinese/korean sentiments almost always comes in waves and never just one incident.Just check some of the online comments on Japanese news site or go to some public area and “read the air” as they say. anti-chinese sentiment is now the talk of town again.

    Historically speaking, anti-chinese/anti-korean sentiment is always cool and hip collective activity and sport. To this day this hasn’t changed one bit as it is very ingrained into the culture itself. Subconcious loose lips always revel the true colors of the racist.

    Like this example where a group of J-nationalists show up to protest a comfort women monument.
    https://apjjf.org/2019/20/McNeill.html

    Short moments ago, Carlos Ghosn was a hot topic in NJ media, its SARs from China broadcasted all over the news. Will Carlos Ghosn still have an audience next week?

    I have a feeling that Japan’s North Korean style justice system will be swept under the rug and become forgotten just like with Fukushima. What terrible timing of things, it seems Lady Luck is always on the side of the corrupt elites of Japan.

    Reply
  • AnonymousOG says:

    Jan 11: Mr. Ghosn’s former lawyer
    (Mr. Takashi Takano) shows us the
    303 hours lawyer-less interrogation:

    2018/11/19 – 2hours 16m
    2018/11/21 – 2hours 13m
    2018/11/22 – 7hours 43m
    2018/11/23 – 6hours 18m
    2018/11/24 – 7hours 6m
    2018/11/25 – 7hours 6m
    2018/11/26 – 6hours 3m
    2018/11/27 – 7hours 45m
    2018/11/28 – 6hours 12m
    2018/11/29 – 7hours 22m
    2018/11/30 – 5hours 18m
    2018/12/1 – 6hours 52m
    2018/12/2 – 6hours 31m
    2018/12/3 – 7hours 31m
    2018/12/4 – 4hours 52m
    2018/12/5 – 6hours 9m
    2018/12/8 – 6hours 35m
    2018/12/9 – 7hours 36m
    2018/12/10 – 6hours 9m
    2018/12/11 – 1hour 53m
    2018/12/12 – 7hours
    2018/12/13 – 7hours 5m
    2018/12/14 – 7hours 46m
    2018/12/15 – 6hours 33m
    2018/12/16 – 7hours 11m
    2018/12/17 – 6hours 21m
    2018/12/18 – 6hours 3m
    2018/12/19 – 7hours 34m
    2018/12/22 – 6hours 51m
    2018/12/23 – 2hours 54m
    2018/12/24 – 6hours 31m
    2018/12/25 – 7hours 54m
    2018/12/26 – 7hours 7m
    2018/12/27 – 4hours 58m
    2018/12/31 – 2hours 58m
    2019/1/1 – 7hours 2m
    2019/1/2 – 6hours 32m
    2019/1/3 – 7hours 31m
    2019/1/5 – 6hours 49m
    2019/1/7 – 7hours 15m
    2019/1/8 – 7hours 1m
    2019/1/11 – 48minutes
    2019/4/5 – 1hour 50m
    2019/4/6 – 6hours
    2019/4/8 – 3hours
    2019/4/12 – 7hours 30m
    2019/4/16 – 6hours 10m
    2019/4/17 – 7hours 30m
    2019/4/19 – 6hours
    2019/4/20 – 7hours 45m

    http://archive.is/3yLes

    Japan: 303 hours lawyer-less interrogation.

    Hat tip to u/Lations & u/Wolframite for the link. 🙂

    Reply
    • Looks like 8 hours a day is the limit they should stay below.
      They questioned him the longest on Dec 25th, Christmas day, and for anyone who knows Japanese psyche, that was no accident. Yes, they wanted to make Christmas day as bad as possible for him because they are bullies.

      Reply
    • TJJ wrote:
      “Looks like 8 hours a day is the limit … ”

      Wow, I made a major mistake above, sorry about that, I’ll correct it right now:

      There were actually twenty days of MORE-than-8-hours-a-day lawyer-less interrogation!

      (For some strange unknown reason those very important twenty days became invisible during the copying and pasting process.)

      So folks, here’s the even-worse-than-thought correct report of reality:

      Jan 11: Mr. Ghosn’s former lawyer
      (Mr. Takashi Takano) shows us the
      *483* hours lawyer-less interrogation:

      2018/11/19 – 2hours 16m
      2018/11/20 – 8hours 3m <—–
      2018/11/21 – 2hours 13m
      2018/11/22 – 7hours 43m
      2018/11/23 – 6hours 18m
      2018/11/24 – 7hours 6m
      2018/11/25 – 7hours 6m
      2018/11/26 – 6hours 3m
      2018/11/27 – 7hours 45m
      2018/11/28 – 6hours 12m
      2018/11/29 – 7hours 22m
      2018/11/30 – 5hours 18m
      2018/12/1 – 6hours 52m
      2018/12/2 – 6hours 31m
      2018/12/3 – 7hours 31m
      2018/12/4 – 4hours 52m
      2018/12/5 – 6hours 9m
      2018/12/6 – 11hours 43m <—–
      2018/12/7 – 8hours 43m <—–
      2018/12/8 – 6hours 35m
      2018/12/9 – 7hours 36m
      2018/12/10 – 6hours 9m
      2018/12/11 – 1hour 53m
      2018/12/12 – 7hours
      2018/12/13 – 7hours 5m
      2018/12/14 – 7hours 46m
      2018/12/15 – 6hours 33m
      2018/12/16 – 7hours 11m
      2018/12/17 – 6hours 21m
      2018/12/18 – 6hours 3m
      2018/12/19 – 7hours 34m
      2018/12/20 – 12hours 18m <—–
      2018/12/21 – 9hours 37m <—–
      2018/12/22 – 6hours 51m
      2018/12/23 – 2hours 54m
      2018/12/24 – 6hours 31m
      2018/12/25 – 7hours 54m
      2018/12/26 – 7hours 7m
      2018/12/27 – 4hours 58m
      2018/12/28 – 8hours 55m <—–
      2018/12/29 – 8hours 14m <—–
      2018/12/30 – 8hours <—–
      2018/12/31 – 2hours 58m
      2019/1/1 – 7hours 2m
      2019/1/2 – 6hours 32m
      2019/1/3 – 7hours 31m
      2019/1/4 – 8hours 46m <—–
      2019/1/5 – 6hours 49m
      2019/1/6 – 8hours 5m <—–
      2019/1/7 – 7hours 15m
      2019/1/8 – 7hours 1m
      2019/1/9 – 8hours 46m <—–
      2019/1/11 – 48minutes
      2019/4/5 – 1hour 50m
      2019/4/6 – 6hours
      2019/4/7 – 8hours <—–
      2019/4/8 – 3hours
      2019/4/9 – 8hours <—–
      2019/4/10 – 8hours 20m <—–
      2019/4/11 – 8hours 10m <—–
      2019/4/12 – 7hours 30m
      2019/4/13 – 8hours 15m <—–
      2019/4/14 – 11hours <—–
      2019/4/15 – 8hours 30m <—–
      2019/4/16 – 6hours 10m
      2019/4/17 – 7hours 30m
      2019/4/18 – 8hours <—–
      2019/4/19 – 6hours
      2019/4/20 – 7hours 45m
      2019/4/21 – 10hours 30m <—–

      http://archive.is/3yLes

      Japan: *483* hours lawyer-less interrogation.

      Hat tip to u/Lations & u/Wolframite for the link. 🙂

      Reply
  • David Markle says:

    CNBC interview with Carole and Carlos Ghosn
    “You are risking your life”
    To CEO s but applies to all N.J. in Japan

    “I’m saying get out,” said Ghosn. “If you have the risk of having a problem with your colleague or with your partners, you can be set up, and if you’re set up nobody is gonna save you.”

    https://tinyurl.com/wnqav3h

    Reply
  • David Markle says:

    I can give you an example of how this can happen even with somebody you don’t even know. Several years ago I moved into a new neighborhood and one of the neighbors didn’t like the fact that a mixed marriage family moved in near him. One day I get a call from the local police telling me that so and so has accused me of breaking into his house and assaulting him and his wife is a witness. I deny anything of this. A few days went by and the police call to tell me that they did an investigation. I don’t know if they actually did anything, but they tell me that his wife decided to recant her witness story, but he still maintains it happened. They say to just forget it as they are not going to pursue it.

    This turns into a case of the cops lack of interest in pursuing real or imagined crimes being to my advantage, but it easily could have gone a bad direction if they felt vindictive against foreigners. Or if he had gone directly to the prosecutors which he was obviously not aware of.

    Reply
    • In most countries it is a crime to make a false accusation against someone with the intent of having them investigated by the police. But not in Japan where bullies rule.

      Reply
      • TJJ, both your comments on this today are spot-on; it’s a bullying culture. It’s totally endemic at every level of Japanese society.
        I (still) blame it on a Confucian world view that forces all interaction into vertical power relationships and denies ‘win-win’ outcomes for ‘win-lose’ zero-sum games. It makes interactions in Japan tedious, bothersome and best avoided.
        Explains the hikikomori phenomena and the suicide rate.

        Reply
      • David Markle says:

        It is a crime to make false accusations to the police in Japan. HOWEVER, in Japan it is up to the police to decide whether the accusation was made with the intent to harass. In my case we were having issues with this neighbor over an access road to my property that went over his property. His MOA was to call the police in ANY dispute with a neighbor. He did it to several others over things like trees that were cut, property line disputes, buildings that were put up near a property line, electric pole rights payments, and so on. The police were well aware of his “methods” but never did anything except maybe a verbal warning or two, if that.

        The point is anyone can be accused of some criminal action and have to defend themselves but NJ are coming to bat blindfolded with one hand behind their back.

        Reply
  • “Japan’s Justice Minister Mori vows she will never give up on bringing Ghosn to justice.”

    https://tinyurl.com/srp8gu8

    Well, well, poor little girl. Something about this woman bothers me greatly. If she is so sure of her case against Ghosn, why doesn’t she take her crack team of legal bureaucrats to Lebanon and file a case there? The reason is she only plays on fields where she has all the advantages, gets to write the rules, call all the shots, and is on her home court with all the fans cheering her on. Could it be the fake sense of self-righteousness? Maybe she thinks she is channeling Golda Meir, and has plans for a Japanese Mossad/Entebbi airport type operation to bring the evil foreigners to divine justice. hmph!

    Reply
    • Japanese culture values “gambaru spirit” and “never give up”, and thus inflexibility yet persistence. Thats why as Jim mentioned, interactions are bothersome. Furthermore, the buzzword of “negotiations” as English study is always never to actually use the techniques- as this would involve compromise- but simply to understand western thinking.
      I ll. never forget this TV drama I saw in the 90s, about a young male Japanese shinyushin relentlessly pursuing a busy foreign executive from place to place, even to the hotel in borderline harassment. “Sumisu san. o negai shimasu!”
      The busy executive ignores him. He finally gets the deal because the western CEO finally recognizes his “gambaru” spirit (yeah right). Of course, the terms and conditions are not changed in this J fantasy. Th message is just to be persistent and wear people down until they give in. Hang on, that sounds like the justice system also! Tire them out until they sign a confession.

      And yet. There was a telling (and surprising for daytime TV) line in English at the end from the executive “Some Japanese think they have to offer something, even a woman, to get the business deal. They don’t understand the nature of our business”
      Riiiight……..

      Reply
  • Not only that, semes like some Nissan execs want
    to get close and personal with Ghosn. Now the
    rulers of Japan Inc are taking the extra step making it their mission to punish any NJ that dares to stand up to them and using Carlos Ghosn to send a bold stern warning to NJ.

    Nissan sues Ghosn in Japan, seeks ¥10 billion in damages

    https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/02/12/business/corporate-business/nissan-sues-ghosn-japan-seeks-%C2%A510-billion-damages/

    Gut instinct also tells me that this Japan Inc. wasn’t too happy with Woodford’s whistleblowing of Olympus and walking away so Nissan probably wants to send a stronger message against NJ “dissidents” of the J-corporate system.

    Little by little, I find Japan’s xenophobia getting more hot headed, more emboldened, and being less reserved about it than they used to.

    LDP getting trying to get enough peope to rile against NJ and to volunterly support eventual constitution change somehow? I wouldn’t hold my breath on the J-public to be able to protect the peace constitution, it is only a matter of when not if.

    Reply
    • It could very well be that.
      Or it could just be that in the same way many Japanese individuals can’t handle disagreements and get butt-hurt and resort to all sorts of deflection and whataboutery on a larger scale? Nissan and Japanese prosecutors refuse to accept any of the questions about their own perceived failings in this case and continually throw out barely related accusations and insinuations like the kid caught with his hand in the cookie jar. It’s just childish indignant deflection combined with a stalker like impotent desire for some kind of revenge. They can’t ‘let it lie’, the other party just HAS to be wrong! Can’t accept anything less than a win-lose outcome in the land of vertical hierarchies, even if that pushes them (again!) into a lose-lose outcome. Relations with S. Korea are a prime example; someone ‘has’ to lose and someone has to win! I think the Japanese believe that win-win outcomes only means that you ‘lost’, you just don’t understand how yet.

      Reply
    • David Markle says:

      They hope to take judgements from Japan courts abroad for collection in foreign jurisdictions, based on some treaties they have with a group of western powers, however; this is a two way street, and when they find that out, it might not go the way they hope.

      Reply
  • David Markle says:

    Japan Minister in Lebanon To Seek Return of Fugitive Ghosn

    https://tinyurl.com/s4v9ns3

    “He said he’d explained Tokyo’s views on Ghosns’ flight from Japan and was “able to gain understanding of the Lebanese government.” He said Tokyo and Beirut have “agreed to cooperate with each other,” but did not elaborate on the extent of that cooperation.”

    So Mori dispatched one of her agents to “explain” the Japanese justice system to Lebanon. I thought foreigners were incapable of understanding anything of Japan. This should read: ‘Japan dispatched backchannel sales agent to inquire how much it might cost to get Lebanon to send Ghosn  back for divine justice. “We know how much trouble your country is in so, we are more than willing to make a show of support to the distinguished government of your fine country…blah, blah, wink, wink.
    Why don’t we start with a percentage of the bond Ghosn forfeited?” ‘

    I don’t understand why these sort of articles are even excreted when they are such blatant hogwash.

    Reply
    • J’splaining. I am sure this really persuaded them-not. I guess they shouldve hired an NJ after all, to teach them negotiation strategies instead.
      So Mori dispatched one of her agents to “explain” the Japanese justice system to Lebanon. ”
      plus the bribe.
      -“We know how much trouble your country is in so, we are more than willing to make a show of support to the distinguished government of your fine country…blah, blah, wink, wink.

      Reply
      • “I guess they shouldve hired an NJ after all, to teach them negotiation strategies instead.”

        Japan never seems to have much luck at the UN hearings do they. I’ve pondered the reason for this for a long time.

        My theory is that Japanese elites are too used to telling lies which their subordinates and cohorts immediately agree with, that they think they can get away with it at the UN too. There is also that whole lack of logical reasoning being taught in learning institutions.

        The lies are so easy to see through that it is often comical and it makes the decision to rule against them very easy.

        Reply
  • UN Human Rights calls Japan’s treatment of Chosn a breach of his human rights and calls for Japan to compensate him.
    Response?
    ‘The Japanese government denounced the report as a “totally unacceptable” viewpoint that will change nothing in the country’s legal process.’

    ‘Unacceptable’ ‘will change nothing’.
    Did they say this with a straight face? It’s not something to be proud of. I guess they really think they showed those pesky foreigners.
    How’s that effort to turn Tokyo into an international financial hub going, BTW? Attracting much elite foreign talent?
    I guess Japan will be back in touch with the U.N. when it wants some more UNESCO listings…

    https://japantoday.com/category/crime/Human-rights-panel-Japan-was-wrong-to-detain-Carlos-Ghosn-owes-him-compensation

    Reply
    • How’s that effort to turn Tokyo into an international financial hub going, BTW? Attracting much elite foreign talent?

      Since you asked:

      According to the latest Global Financial Centers Index from London-based think tank Z/Yen Group and the China Development Institute released in September, New York and London dominated the top two spots, followed by Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. Osaka came in 39th, and Fukuoka was outside the ranking covering more than 100 locations.

      Soruce: Japan to give tax breaks for foreigners to attract financial experts

      Soo…Tokyo is so-so, but Osaka & Fukuoka? Not so much.

      Now having the rule of law (i.e. instead of tax breaks) would obviously go a long way towards the GoJ’s goal of making Japan the next Hong Kong, but I digress.

      Reply
  • Tax breaks are probably why expats tolerate the increasingly authoritarian HK and Singapore environments. Take them away and there is no reason to stay. This, plus the delicious sushi/geisha girls, are no doubt an irresistible combination and appeal to Tokyo decision makers. Appeal to them anyway. To expats, some.

    Heard yet another anecdote the other day from an expat architect leaving Tokyo; “they wont let me do anything. Its a waste of time career-wise”
    Seems that sushi and geisha alone is NOT going to cut it. Seems the expats want a meaningful career, not just hedonistic carousing on a corporate tab. Oh dear, Japan.

    Reply
    • This reminded me of something I read earlier in the year.
      A western executive quit her job in Tokyo and went back to the USA because of the lack of meaningful work she was allowed to do. Something about being denied actualization in Japan, being permanently kept on hand as proof of the organization’s ‘internationalization’.
      It was boring, a waste of time and potential, and ultimately unfulfilling.

      Reply
      • token hire, token gaijin. Pathetically, this was cited in Powers’ book “working in Japan” in 1990. So in thirty years, zero’s changed.

        Reply
    • David Markle says:

      Heard yet another anecdote the other day from an expat architect leaving Tokyo; “they wont let me do anything. Its a waste of time career-wise”

      I heard this from a foreign guy who worked for a news organization around when I first came to Japan: “Have you figured out that Tokyo is a dead end career-wise yet?”

      I heard this 41 years ago!!! Sheesh!

      I guess there is no such thing as accumulation of knowledge as far as Japan is concerned

      Reply
  • I hope for their sake the Taylors were well paid as they’re going to be experiencing first-hand what their client went through:

    Supreme Court denies accused ex-Nissan boss Ghosn smugglers’ bid to stay in US

    ゴーン氏逃亡支援容疑の親子 米最高裁も移送差し止めず

    Supreme Court denies accused ex-Nissan boss Ghosn smugglers’ bid to stay in US
    February 14, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)

    BOSTON (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way Saturday for the extradition of an American father and son wanted by Japan in the escape of former Nissan Motor Co. boss Carlos Ghosn.

    Justice Stephen Breyer denied a bid to put the extradition on hold to give Michael and Peter Taylor time to pursue an appeal in their case challenging the U.S. officials’ plans to hand them over to Japan.

    Michael Taylor, a U.S. Army Special Forces veteran, and his son are accused of helping Ghosn, who led the Japanese automaker for two decades, flee the country last year with Ghosn tucked away in a box on a private jet. The flight went first to Turkey, and then to Lebanon, where Ghosn has citizenship but which has no extradition treaty with Japan.

    Lawyers for the Taylors argue the men can’t legally be extradited and will be treated unfairly in the Japan. Their lawyers told the Supreme Court in a brief filed Friday that the men would face harsh treatment in the Japanese criminal justice system.

    “The issues raised by petitioners merit full and careful consideration, and the stakes are enormous for them. The very least the U.S. courts owe the petitioners is a full chance to litigate these issues, including exercising their appellate rights, before they are consigned to the fate that awaits them at the hands of the Japanese government,” their attorneys wrote.

    U.S. authorities had said they would not hand the men over to Japan while their bid for a stay was pending before Breyer, an attorney for the Taylors said.

    Michael Taylor said in an interview with The Associated Press that he feels betrayed that the U.S. would try to turn him over to Japan after his service to the country. Taylor refused to discuss the details of the case because of the possibility that he could be tried in Japan, but he insisted his son had no involvement.

    The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston refused Thursday to put the extradition on hold, finding that the Taylors are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their case. The Taylors have been locked up at a suburban Boston jail since their arrest last May.

    Ghosn was out on bail at the of his escape and awaiting trial on allegations that he underreported his income and committed a breach of trust by diverting Nissan money for his personal gain. Ghosn said he fled because he could not expect a fair trial, was subjected to unfair conditions in detention and was barred from meeting his wife under his bail conditions. Ghosn has denied any wrongdoing.
    ENDS

    Reply
  • I dont understand why the Taylors didnt follow their own book on extracting people from undesirable locals, and extract themselves from the reaches of the U.S. government. They had to know they would be sought after by the authorities. Maybe they thought they could get off easy and enjoy the publicity later with more business coming their way. They just seemed to let themselves be caught until it looked like they were going to be extradited, then decided to say; wait a minute! maybe this isnt such a good idea after all.

    Reply
  • David Markle says:

    They have a team of high powered lawyers and lobbyists. This raises one red flag. Who are these friends in high places? People who may avail of their services from time to time?

    Ghosn was escorted out the end of 2019, the Taylor’s were arrested in May. Plenty of time to find a place to lay low, but no they didn’t do that. They went back to the U.S. where they knew an Interpol warrant was issued for their arrest and waited for the knock on their door. They didn’t even try to hide. Maybe more to this, me thinks. Movie rights?

    Reply
  • Wait wait, last November a UN human rights committee declared that Ghosn’s detention was arbitrary and an extrajudicial abuse of process that could have no legal basis under international law.

    So what can his rescuers be guilty of? Shouldn’t they be lauded?

    Reply
  • Japan charges Americans with helping Ghosn flee, jump bail

    From the article:

    Prosecutors said the Taylors were formally charged with helping a criminal escape, although dates and other details of a trial were undecided.
    Now that they have been charged they can continue to be detained. A court will decide whether they will be granted bail.

    Somehow I get the feeling the Taylors wont be granted bail.

    Also from the article:

    If convicted, the Taylors face up to three years in prison and a fine of up to 300,000 yen ($2,900).

    Compare this with a guy in Kamakura who, for the ‘crime’ of mistakenly tossing used bentōbako into mailboxes instead of the trash, could face up to five years in prison, or a fine up to 500,000 yen (about $4,600):

    British man arrested in Japan for alleged littering says he mistook mailbox for trashcan

    Reply
    • Jim Di Griz says:

      Yeah, I think I flagged this guy on Debito.org a couple of months ago. He’s got such a ‘more complete understanding’ than other NJ that he uses a pejorative to describe non-japanese, himself included. Way to go genius.
      Idiot.

      Reply
      • He knows much more than the average person about Japanese companies but is still “astounded at the lack of women in management”. What a clown.

        My understanding of watermelons is much deeper than most people. Still, when I looked inside one the other day I was amazed that it was pink!

        Still, I have to wonder what is wrong with the company that they hired this next NJ scapegoat. Probably hiding huge debts.

        Reply

Leave a Reply to David Markle Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>