Japan’s controversial new state secrets law condemned as ‘the largest ever threat to democracy in po
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/12/07/japans-controversial-new-state-secrets-law-was-condemned-as-the-largest-ever-threat-to-democracy-in-postwar-japan-by-nobel-academics/
Japans controversial new state secrets law condemned as the largest ever threat to democracy in postwar Japan by Nobel academics
By Agence France-Presse
Saturday, December 7, 2013 12:09 EST
Japans controversial new state secrets law was condemned Saturday as the largest ever threat to democracy in postwar Japan by a group of academics, including two Nobel prize winners, reports said.
On Friday Japans parliament adopted a new law handing out stiffer penalties for those who spill state secrets, despite a public outcry over fears the legislation was draconian and would impinge on press freedom and the publics right to know.
In a strongly worded attack on the new law, a group of 31 academics, including Nobel Prize winners Toshihide Maskawa and Hideki Shirakawa, accused the Japanese government of threatening the fundamental human rights and pacifist principles established by the countrys constitution.
The controversial bill, proposed by the right-wing government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, was approved by the Senate on Friday evening, a few days after it was passed in the lower house.