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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.japan
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!dxcern!vxcrna.cern.ch!ikeda
- From: ikeda@vxcrna.cern.ch (IKEDA,M./EP)
- Subject: Re: Fingerprinting Gaijin
- Message-ID: <18NOV199217192360@vxcrna.cern.ch>
- News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
- Sender: news@dxcern.cern.ch (USENET News System)
- Organization: European Organization for Nuclear Research, CERN
- References: <Bxw8Ip.8zr@world.std.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 16:19:00 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <Bxw8Ip.8zr@world.std.com>, cmr@world.std.com (Charles M Richmond) writes...
- >
- > TOKYO (UPI) -- Japan's Supreme Court on Monday upheld the government's
- >authority to fingerprint alien residents of Japan in a case that has
- >kept an American woman living in the nation from traveling abroad for
- >10n years.
- > The court rejected the appeal of Kathleen Morikawa, 42, a columnist
- >who had demanded the justice ministry's decision denying her a re-entry
- >permit because she refused to allow the fingerprinting be declared null
- >and void.
- ..
- > Morikawa, a U.S. citizen, has lived in Japan since 1973. In September
- >1982, she refused to allow officials to take her fingerprints in
- >accordance with the Alien Registration Law.
- ..
- > All foreign residents over the age of 16 who stay in Japan for more
- >than one year are required to have their a print taken of their left
- >index finger when applying for registration certificates.
- > A new law which will take effect in January will eliminate
- >fingerprinting for South Koreans, Taiwanese and other foreigners with
- >permanent resident status.
-
- Discussions on fingerprinting has gone through scj before, but I am still
- a bit mystified by Ms. Morikawa (and other Americans) who think that
- fingerprinting is so horrible. In fact it seems incredibly hypocritical.
- The US requires fingerprints of *permanent residents* of the US and not
- only of one index finger, but of *all* fingers left and right. And then
- the silly thing is that the US requires all these fingerprints *again*
- when one applies for citizenship.
-
- I am very glad that the new law in Japan no longer requires fingerprinting
- of permanent residents though.
-
- -- Makoto
-