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Okinawa votes ‘no’ in referendum on US military base move

  • The ballot asked locals whether they supported a plan to reclaim land – which has already started – at a coastal site and move the base at Futenma there

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Denny Tamaki (centre), the governor of Okinawa, at a meeting in Naha on February 23, 2019. Photo by JIJI PRESS/AFP
Agence France-Presse

Voters on the Japanese island of Okinawa have rejected the relocation of a controversial US military base, according to official results from a non-binding referendum Sunday.

Some 72 per cent voted against the move with 19 per cent in favour from a 52 per cent turnout, the local government said.

Opponents of the relocation – some 434,000 – had turned out in sufficient numbers to meet the threshold required for Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki to “respect” the result of the symbolic referendum, it said.

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The site of the new US base in the Henoko coastal district of Nago, Okinawa, where land reclamation work continues. Photo: Kyodo
The site of the new US base in the Henoko coastal district of Nago, Okinawa, where land reclamation work continues. Photo: Kyodo

For this to happen, one quarter of the eligible electorate – or around 290,000 people – had to vote for one of the three options: for or against relocation or a third choice of “neither”.

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Tamaki hailed the results as “extremely significant”.

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