Koza riot

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Koza Riot
File:Koza Riot 3.jpg
A U.S. military serviceman stands near a burned car in Koza hours after the riot
Date December 20, 1970
Location Koza, Okinawa
Participants Okinawan people;
American servicemen
Outcome 56-60 American servicemembers injured;
21 Okinawans arrested
File:Koza Crossroads in 1950s.JPG
The site of the riot roughly 15 years prior, c. 1955.

The Koza riot (コザ暴動 Koza bōdō?) was a violent and spontaneous protest against the US military presence in Okinawa, which occurred on the night of December 20, 1970, into the morning of the following day. Roughly 5,000 Okinawans clashed with roughly 700 American MPs in an event which has been regarded as symbolic of Okinawan anger against 25 years of US military occupation.[1][2] In the riot, approximately 60 Americans were injured, 80 cars were burned, and several buildings on Kadena Air Base were destroyed or heavily damaged.[3]

Background

Following Japan's defeat in World War II, Japan came to be formally occupied by Allied forces and governed under martial law for roughly seven years. While the Occupation of Japan came to an end and most of Japan regained its independence in April 1952, Okinawa Prefecture was to remain under US military occupation for another twenty years.

By 1970, it had already been decided and was widely known that the US military occupation of Okinawa was going to be ended in 1972, and that Okinawa would return to being a part of independent Japan, but also that a considerable US military presence was to remain. This came in the wake of a number of incidents between servicemen and Okinawan civilians over the years, including a hit-and-run accident in September 1970, only a few months prior to the riot, which resulted in the death of an Okinawan housewife from Itoman. The servicemen involved in that incident were acquitted at their court-martial.[4][5] This incident fueled the growing discontent of Okinawans with the standard status of forces that exempted US servicemen from Okinawan justice, as are all military personnel stationed on foreign soil long term.[6]

The riot

The riot lasted seven or eight hours, beginning late at night on December 20, 1970, and continuing past dawn the following morning. It was not pre-meditated, planned or arranged, but is said to have erupted spontaneously from tensions, which had reached a breaking point.[4]

Around 1 o'clock that night, a car being driven by a drunk American serviceman hit a drunken Okinawan man, on a road near a major entertainment and red-light district in Koza (now called Okinawa City), a short distance from Kadena Air Force Base.[7] The Americans got out of their car and made sure the man was alright; he presently stood up and walked away. The four men were then about to get back into their car to leave the scene when they were confronted by a number of Okinawan taxi drivers who had witnessed the accident. A crowd began to form; some where shouting "no more acquittals", "Yankee go home" and "don’t insult Okinawans".[8]

Two American military police vehicles also arrived, sirens blaring. While the newly arrived MPs attempted to extricate their comrades from the situation, the crowd had the victim lie down where he'd been hit, and had him reenact the incident.[4] Many accounts emphasize that the newly arrived MPs ignored the man who had been hit, focusing only on seeking to extricate their countrymen.[9][10]

Another American car arriving on the scene accidentally struck one belonging to an Okinawan, and as passersby and people from the neighborhood stopped to get involved, the crowd grew to around 700, began to throw rocks and bottles, and attempted to turn over the car involved in the original accident. Okinawan police were able to remove the American driver safely from the scene, but the confrontation continued to escalate.[11]

File:Koza Riot 1.jpg
An Okinawan policeman surveys the damage hours after the riot

Warning shots were fired, attracting a larger crowd, which soon numbered around five thousand; the number of MPs on the scene was now around 700. The rioters broke into, turned over, and torched over seventy cars, and continued to throw rocks and bottles, along with Molotov cocktails assembled in nearby homes, bars, restaurants, and other establishments. The rioters pulled American servicemen from their cars and beat them, then burned their cars. Some of the rioters danced traditional folk dances as the riot continued around them; others passed through the gate into the Air Force Base, overturning and torching cars, breaking windows, and otherwise raining destruction upon American property there as well. About 500 rioters then broke the fence of Kadena Air Base and razed the military employment building and the offices of Stars and Stripes newspaper. The MPs, meanwhile, began to deploy tear gas.[4] The riot finally died down and came to an end around 7 o'clock in the morning;[9] in the end, many were injured, including 60 Americans, and 82 people arrested.[12]

Popular culture references

A song on the eponymous debut album of the Okinawa-based electronic duo Ryukyu Underground is entitled "Koza Riot".[13]

Notes

  1. Kadekawa. p176.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Mitchell, Jon, "Military policeman's 'hobby' documented 1970 Okinawa rioting", Japan Times, 17 December 2011, p. 12.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Inoue. pp53-55.
  5. "Koza hanbei sōdō". Okinawa konpakuto jiten (沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia").
  6. Aldous, p. 163
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Aldous, p. 158
  9. 9.0 9.1 Shinzato. p243.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Mitchell, Jon, "Ex-MP revisits Okinawa's Koza Riot", Japan Times, 8 January 2011, p. 12.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. "Ryukyu Underground at Discogs." Discogs.com. Accessed 14 September 2009.

References

  • Mitchell, Jon, "Koza Remembered", Japan Times, December 27, 2009, p. 7.
  • Inoue, Masamichi S. Okinawa and the US Military: Identity Making in the Age of Globalization. New York: Columbia University Press, 2007.
  • Kadekawa, Manabu (ed.). Okinawa chanpurū jiten (沖縄チャンプルー事典, "Okinawa Champloo Encyclopedia"). Tokyo: Yamakei Publishers, 2003.
  • "Koza hanbei sōdō" (コザ反米騒動, "Koza Anti-American Riot"). Okinawa konpakuto jiten (沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia"). Ryukyu Shimpo. 1 March 2003. Accessed 14 September 2009.
  • Shinzato, Keiji et al. Okinawa-ken no rekishi (沖縄県の歴史, "History of Okinawa Prefecture"). Tokyo: Yamakawa Publishers, 1996.
  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.