Japanese Nationalists: “To All You Ugly Koreans, Please Get on the Train and Return to North Korea”

Daily Stormer
September 9, 2014

Japan for the Japanese!
Japan for the Japanese!

The UN is becoming increasingly anxious about shutting down “hate speech” in Japan. Presumably, the reason it bothers them so much is that they fear that those in the West might catch wind of the open racist in the East and ask themselves why a developed country such as Japan is allowed to defend their race and culture and we aren’t.

Japanese Nationalist rallies against Korean, formerly focused in Tokyo and Osaka, are now spreading around the country.

Asahi Shimbun:

On a Saturday in late July, several dozens of people gathered at a park near the Kawasaki municipal government building for a demonstration to protect Kawasaki against “anti-Japanese leftists, traitors and lawless foreigners.”

About 8,000 ethnic Koreans live in Kawasaki, whose city government set up a council of representatives from the foreign community to reflect their voices in city administration. The aim is to create a community where different cultures can co-exist.

The demonstrators carried military Rising Sun flags and screamed abuse using hand-held microphones. Among the slogans were: “To all you ugly Koreans, please get on the train and return to North Korea” and “The Japanese government must end all special privileges given to South Koreans living in Japan.”

Street demonstrations targeting foreigners in Japan became more prevalent from around 2008. The National Police Agency first took note of the growing problem in fiscal 2009 when it issued a report about the public security situation in Japan and abroad.

One of the main instigators of the campaign is a group called Zainichi Tokken wo Yurusanai Shimin no Kai (Group of citizens who do not tolerate privileges for ethnic Korean residents in Japan), known more commonly as Zaitokukai.

The group submitted its own report to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.

A high-ranking member of the group said, “We were always on the receiving end as only the voices of leftist groups that were critical of us were reaching the U.N. panel.”

However, the member went on to say that criticism also amounted to a form of publicity that would attract more supporters to the rightist group’s cause.

There were at least 360 cases of hate speech demonstrations and related street protests last year, according to a citizens group which has been keeping track.