Though local people and politicians have repeatedly voiced their opposition to the relocation of the controversial US army base on Okinawa to another area of the island, the Japanese government continues to ignore them, Shinsaku Nohira, spokesman for the Peace Boat NGO, told Radio Sputnik on Tuesday.
"Two years ago, the mayors of all villages, all cities in Okinawa, came to Tokyo to say that they are against a new base in Henoka, to Prime Minister Abe," said Nohira.
Abe ignored their request; the election of a governor, Takeshi Onaga, in Okinawa on a pledge to stop the site's construction has also fallen on deaf ears.
"Now, 74 percent of US bases in Japan are concentrated in Okinawa; Okinawa occupies just six percent of mainland Japan. People feel this is discrimination to Okinawa, that's why local people get furious," explained the Peace Boat campaigner, whose organization works to promote human rights and sustainable development.
More than half of the 50,000 US troops stationed in Japan are based in Okinawa, and local people are opposed to their presence due to the high number of crimes committed by US military personnel living in the area.
On Tuesday, the Japanese government filed a lawsuit against the governor of Okinawa, demanding that Takeshi Onaga rescind his decision to withdraw permission to carry out key landfill work at the proposed site of the new base.
"My expectations are not optimistic" regarding the outcome of the lawsuit, said Nohira, who said that the governor would find it difficult to get the court to find in his favor, since it is not independent from the government.
"Local people will never accept a new base in Okinawa. So I think as long as the Japanese government sticks to a new base in Okinawa, I think as a result, the Japanese government cannot maintain a good relationship with the US."