日本は既に特亜人を大量受入れしてる移民大国なんですけどね
・2016.10.27 CNN News
Kyoto: World's most photogenic city?
(CNN)Never been to Kyoto?
Chances are your curiosity is already piqued.
Pretty much every leading glossy travel mag has given it a shout out for being one of the world's best cities for travelers.
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・2016.10.26 時事通信
総人口、初のマイナス=0.8%減、1億2709万人-15年国勢調査確定値
総務省が26日発表した2015年10月実施の国勢調査の確定値によると、外国人を含む日本の総人口は1億2709万4745人と、10年の前回調査に比べ0.8%(96万2607人)減少した。国勢調査で総人口が減少したのは1920年の調査開始以来初めて。出生数が死亡数を下回る自然減が大きく影響した。
総人口を男女別に見ると、男性が6184万1738人、女性が6525万3007人。日本人は1億2428万3901人で前回から0.9%減少した一方、外国人は175万2368人と6.3%増え、過去最高となった。国連の推計では、総人口は前回と変わらず世界10位。
*オジサン注:国勢調査上の総人口に占める外国人の割合
1,752,368 ÷ 124,283,901= 1.4%
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( 2016.10.31 産経新聞朝刊 )
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ワシントンポスト紙が、日本がシリア難民をたった6人しか受入れていないと、” Adam Taylor ” くんなる記者の署名入りで、暗に日本を非難する記事を堂々と掲載しています。(記事本文は全文を一番下に掲載)
で、この記事を書くに当って、取材協力と情報提供を手伝ったのが、” Yuki Oda ” くんなる日本人らしき人物。
彼、WP紙への日本人取材協力者として、たま〜にGJ的情報提供なさってるんですが( 2015.05.29 Sumo groups hope skinny Japanese kids can recapture their nation’s glory )、やっぱりWP紙と関わりがあるだけあって、基本的にはリベラル思考が強い方なのかも知れません。
反日は、慰安婦問題を始めとして、その最初のとっかかりの情報発信者は、いつだって、自称・日本人。
この点からすると、国境なき記者団が何を仰ろうが( 2016.10.27 琉球新報、国境なき記者団声明 取材の自由を保障せよ )、日本は、大嘘から真実まで、言論の自由が守られていることだけは確かです。
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扨、冒頭のWP紙の記事の話に戻りますが、この記事そのものは、日本政府に難民認定されて、現在、日本で暮らしているシリア難民6人のうちのお一人の " Jamal " くん24才に、日本での生活と日本の難民受入れ状況を語らせ、全体としては、日本はもっとシリア難民を受入れよを匂わせてると同時に、シリア難民を理屈抜きで、「お可哀想に」的存在に仕立て上げています。
でもねぇ。
十字軍から1千年以上も続いてるキリスト教 vs. イスラム教の戦い、並びに、白人達が支配し続けている中東への圧政・搾取の因果応報のツケを、何故、日本が率先して、肩代わりしなければいけないんでしょうか。
白人諸君の持論は、いつだって、全てに亘って、自己責任でした。
だったら、落とし前は、自分達の手でつけなさい。
都合が悪くなると、似非ヒューマニズム全開で、日本にジェニと人道支援を押し付けてくる身勝手極まりない白人軍団。
こういう白人諸君の一方的な決め付け記事を読まされると、本当に腹がたちます。
と言うことで、白人諸君の相も変わらぬ日本パッシングの典型記事として、備忘録のため、一番最後に長文の全文を転載しておきました。
ご興味ある方はご一読下さい。
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この記事の中でWP紙は、嘘か本当かは別として、日本での外国人が占める割合は2%と指摘しています。
1億2千万人の2%となると、240万人です。
2016年4月6日に法務省から発表された在留資格のある在留外国人は、昨年12月時点で、2,232,189人となっておりますから(出典:法務省外国人統計)、表面上だけですと、日本の人口の2%が外国人は、ほぼ的を得ているのかも知れません。
但し、この数字には、不法滞在者が含まれていません。
法務省発表の本年1月現在の不法滞在者は、60,007人です。
闇の世界に潜んでいる不法滞在者を含めれば、もっと居るでしょう。
それに、日本に居住している外国人の割合となりますと、実態を知るためには、既に日本に帰化した外国人の実数も把握しておかなければなりません。
日本では、戦後、何人の外国人が日本に帰化しているんでしょうか。
取り分け、毎年、何人のニダくん・アルくんが日本に帰化しているんでしょうか。
日本での難民受入れの是非を語る前に、先ずはこの実態も考慮に入れておく必要があります。
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帰化許可申請者数,帰化許可者数及び帰化不許可者数の推移(法務省)
http://www.moj.go.jp/content/001180510.pdf
上記統計によりますと、戦後〜平成27年までの帰化許可者合計は、530,846人です。
この統計資料で、かなり奇異に感じるのは、内訳として、韓国・朝鮮と中国別の実数まで暦年毎に明記されているのに、戦後以降の国別帰化人トータル人数が、見事に空白となっていることです。
法務省は、ニダくん・アルくんの脅迫に屈している?
と言うことで、上記統計に基づき、戦後以降のニダくん・アルくんの帰化人総数を算出してみました。
計算の結果は以下の通りです。
戦後〜平成27年、帰化許可者数
トータル:530,846人
うち韓国・朝鮮人:360,116人( 67.8% )
うち中国人:135,954人( 25.6% )
特亜人合計:496,070人( 93.4% )
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以上から、戦後の帰化人は総数、530,846人。
うち93.4%が、ニダくん・アルくんです。
となりますと、日本における外国人のザックバランな人数は、正式な政府統計数字に基づきますと、以下の通りとなります。
在留資格のある外国人2,232,189人 + 不法滞在外国人60,007人 + 戦後以降の帰化人総数530,846人 = 2,813,042人
よって、日本の総人口に対する外国人の割合は、
2,813,042 ÷ 127,103,490(2015/12現在)= 2.2%
となります。
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ってことは、WP紙の2%が外国人は、実態に近いものと思われます。
ですが、上記280万人に加えて、地下に潜っている密入国者、並びに53万帰化人の帰化後の子孫を加味すれば、日本における外国人が占める割合の現実味を帯びた実態は、既に3%を確実に超えているものと考えられます。
日本は既に、50万に近いニダくん・アルくんを日本国民として正式に受入れています。
それに加えて、ニダくん系の特別永住者50万人が、現在進行形で、恐らく未来永劫まで日本に永住なさってお出でです。
特亜系だけでも、トータル1百万人の移民受入れ。
これって、日本は、既に、立派な移民大国だとお思いになりませんか。
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・2016.10.25 AFP日本語版
仏の「ジャングル」撤去初日、2000人超える移民が退去
( 仏北部カレーで、国内各地の避難所に向かうバスに乗るグループ分けが行われる場所の前に並ぶ移民ら、2016.10.24日撮影 )
【10月25日 AFP】フランス北部の港町カレーで、当局が撤去作業を開始した巨大な移民キャンプ通称「ジャングル」から、初日の24日だけで2000人を超える移民らがバスで同地を後にした。
ジャングルにはこれまで、アフガニスタンやスーダン、エリトリア出身者らを中心に、英国への入国を目指す移民数千人が生活し、欧州難民危機の象徴となってきた。ある移民の一行は、荷物を担いで泥まみれの道を進みながら、「バイバイ、ジャングル!」と叫んだ。
ベルナール・カズヌーブ内相によると、撤去作業初日の同日に「避難所へ移送された」移民数は、合わせて2318人に上ったという。
うち1918人は、フランス国内各地に設けられた80か所の受け入れセンターに向け、バスに乗ってカレーを後にした。また400人の未成年者については、別の場所への移送を待つ間、キャンプ内に設けられた「一時受け入れセンター」に収容されたという。
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・2016.10.24 Al Jazeera
Calais 'Jungle' camp evacuation: Where will they go?
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・2016.10.27 Al Jazeera
UN: 2016 Mediterranean refugee deaths hit record 3,800
( About half of the 327,800 refugees who crossed the Mediterranean this year did so using the Libya-Italy route )
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・2016.10.10 Al Jazeera
On the road with Afghan refugees: From Kabul to Lesbos
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・2016.10.27 The Washington Post
Japan has accepted only six Syrian refugees. Meet one of them.
( Japan has accepted only six Syrian refugees. Meet one of them. )
By Adam Taylor
TOKYO ― It sounds like a sadly familiar story. A plan for the family to stick out the war in Syria while the children finish their education ― but then a missile strikes their home.
Jamal, 24, remembers running to the basement after the first explosion and hearing the horrifying sounds above. His younger sister went into shock, prompting his terrified mother to slap her. Like so many other Syrians, they decided they had to leave.
But Jamal and his sister and mother didn’t follow other Syrians to Europe or North America. Instead, after a brief stay in Egypt, they flew to Japan in October 2013. The next year, they were granted refugee status.
In their new home, that makes them an oddity. According to recent figures from the Japanese Ministry of Justice, as of 2015, only six Syrians have been accepted as refugees in the country. Jamal’s family ― who asked not to be fully identified, because of concerns about relatives in Syria ― make up half that number.
The situation isn’t much better for refugees from other nations. Last year, Japan received a record 7,586 applications for refugee status. Just 27 were granted.
This unusual situation has helped make Jamal’s a sought-after voice. He’s frequently interviewed by Japanese reporters and gives lectures to students about his experiences. “I always start my presentations talking about Syria,” he said recently over coffee in the suburbs of Tokyo, “because most Japanese people think that it is just a desert or something.”
To be fair, back in Syria there was a lot Jamal didn’t know about Japan, either. His closest interaction with Japanese culture came through anime, which he watched online with Arabic subtitles.
Jamal’s family had planned to head to Sweden, where a cousin was living. But the Swedish visa was denied, and an uncle who was married to a Japanese woman helped them get to Japan instead.
Tokyo was overwhelming. Jamal’s family didn’t speak the language or understand the culture. Tensions soon boiled over in his uncle’s house, so they moved out. Not yet able to work legally, Jamal found sketchy, sometimes dangerous demolition jobs. After a nail went through his foot, he got tetanus and spent a week in the hospital.
“It was the worst period in my life,” he said. Later, he worked 15 hours a day, six days a week, at a burger chain. By then he was legally able to work, but it was still grueling; the commute took an additional hour and a half.
He eventually found a job teaching English to kindergarten-age children. After the family’s refugee status was approved, he began taking full-time language lessons, and he now speaks Japanese at a conversational level. He has made friends through soccer, playing for two local clubs. Like his Japanese teammates, Jamal heads out to the izakayas for post-match beer and food — though the beer is alcohol-free and he avoids pork because of his faith. He attends Friday prayer at Tokyo Camii, the largest mosque in Japan.
Nation looks inward
Japan isn’t used to outsiders. Less than 2 percent of the population was born in a foreign country.
As the Syrian crisis got worse, Tokyo stepped up its donations to UNHCR, the United Nations’ refugee agency. In 2014, it gave $181.6 million, making it the second-largest donor after the United States.
But it balked at taking in refugees. Last year, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that the country needed to look after its own. While other wealthy nations have resettled thousands of Syrians from refugee camps in the Middle East, Japan has not offered a single resettlement place.
Only a small number of Syrians are in the country — around 500, according to the Japan Association for Refugees, one of a handful of groups that work with refugees in the country. Most arrange temporary visitor visas through friends and acquaintances to allow entry to the country. Some visitors apply for refugee status, though the vast majority of the requests are denied.
This has put Japan at odds with the U.N. refugee agency, which generally considers all Syrians to be eligible for refugee status. In a recent interview, Yasuhiro Hishida, assistant to the director of Japan’s Refugee Status Recognition Office, noted that almost all Syrians are allowed to temporarily stay in Japan for humanitarian reasons, even if they are not granted refugee status.
Jamal could not explain why his family was the exception.
He said he understands Japan’s apprehension about refugees, to an extent. Friends who have ended up in Germany have told him about dangerous Syrians they’ve met in the country. “If you are at home,” he said, “and somebody knocks your door and says, ‘I want to come in,’ you wouldn’t let him come, right? You need to know him.”
But Japan should still do more than it’s doing now, Jamal said. “If, for example, they accepted all the Syrians who are living here — 500 or so — it wouldn’t have such a big impact, because they are separated in each prefecture.”
Yet a recent survey conducted by Ipsos MORI found that just 18 percent of Japanese believed that refugee integration could be a success, while 46 percent disagreed.
A small step
Jamal said that the polite nature of Japanese society shields him from verbal or physical abuse. In comments on YouTube videos of his media appearances or lectures, however, Japanese users accuse him, sometimes in unprintably vulgar terms, of being a terrorist or stealing taxpayers’ money.
Even so, that same Ipsos MORI poll found that 37 percent of the respondents said they didn’t know how Japan should respond to refugees, by far the largest proportion of any of the 22 countries polled.
“It seems that people see it as a fire on the other side of the shore, so to speak,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, a former head of the Tokyo Immigration Bureau. “There are no huge voices over here saying we should accept refugees or not in Japan.”
Sakanaka now runs the Japan Immigration Policy Institute, a rare pro-immigration voice in Japan. He has argued that Japan should accept 10 million immigrants over the next 50 years, with perhaps as many as 500,000 refugees. That position puts him at the fringes of mainstream debate in Japan. Yet Sakanaka said he does see a shift in that debate. He pointed to the announcement by Abe’s government in May that it would allow 150 Syrian students to continue their education in Japan. These Syrians will not be considered refugees, but they may be able to apply for refugee status once they arrive.
“It’s an embarrassingly small number, but at the same time it’s one outstanding step,” he said.
Jamal hopes to return to his studies next year and wants to find a career as a translator. His aim is to become fluent in three languages. His sister attends Japanese high school and speaks the language fluently, while his mother has been working at Uniqlo and has learned enough of the language to get by. Jamal’s father has been able to join them, although he has not received refugee status.
While his parents bitterly miss Syria, Jamal said he can’t imagine leaving Japan. “I’ve started here, so I can’t go start from zero again in another country,” he said. “I’ll build my future here.”
Yuki Oda contributed to this report.