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Japanese troops injured in blast at US military base in Okinawa

Japanese troops injured in blast at US military base in Okinawa

Express Tribune09-06-2025
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Several members of Japan's Self-Defense Forces (SDF) were injured on Monday in an explosion at a facility inside the US military's Kadena Air Base in Okinawa, officials said.
The blast occurred while SDF personnel were preparing to carry out bomb disposal operations, Japan's defence ministry confirmed.
Four troops sustained minor injuries, according to local media reports citing the defence ministry. None of the injuries were life-threatening.
Public broadcaster NHK reported that the explosion may have taken place at a temporary storage site for unexploded ordnance. Officials are working to verify the cause.
"We've heard there was an explosion at the SDF facility and also heard there were injuries but we don't have further details," said Yuta Matsuda, a local official from Yomitan village in Okinawa, speaking to AFP.
There was no evacuation order issued for nearby communities, local authorities said.
The Kadena Air Base is the largest US military installation in the Asia-Pacific region. Okinawa hosts the majority of US military forces in Japan, a long-standing point of tension among residents.
READ MORE: Japanese authorities investigate US marine over assault, rape allegations
Separately, Japan's defence ministry said a Chinese aircraft carrier group, led by the Liaoning, entered Japan's exclusive economic zone (EEZ) over the weekend for the first time before conducting drills involving fighter jets.
The group included two missile destroyers and a fast combat support ship, and passed roughly 300 km southwest of Minamitori Island, the ministry said.
"We think the Chinese military is trying to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in distant areas," a ministry spokesperson said.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters on Monday that Tokyo had conveyed an 'appropriate message' to Beijing, though he stopped short of confirming a formal protest.
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Pakistan embassy to host matchmaking event for Pak, Chinese entrepreneurs

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The writer is a chemical engineer with interest in Society, Politics & Economy. Contact him at: Listen to article Pakistan, born from majority-Hindu apathy, now suffers majority-Muslim ethnic apathy, a tragic comedy. Durkheim (1858), founder of modern sociology, noted mechanical solidarity creates superficial unity but deeper apathy, explaining our socio-political chaos and economic decline. Recent conflict with India showed tactical wins using Chinese tech, but it didn't end hostilities, and more conflicts to follow with pauses. It is, however, troubling to see apathy in Balochistan, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, and parts of Sindh regarding military victory signifying anemic national cohesion. This demands a revisit to Jinnah's original goal for Pakistan: save some, not all, Muslims in India. He united willing Mohajirs and unwilling Bengal, Punjab, Sindh, NWFP and Balochistan under his vision of a modern democratic state. 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West Pakistan stayed feudal, but East Pakistan implemented land reforms by 1950. Ayub and Bhutto's half-measures failed and no one dare talk about land reform in Pakistan since 1977. Jinnah kept military under civilian rule, fired General Messervy for ignoring him on Kashmir and placed military policy under cabinet control. His death allowed military to regain influence with feudals and bureaucrats — something Jinnah had forbidden. His bureaucratic reforms replaced feudal-backed recruits with merit-based ones. An exam under his watch in February 1948 had only 12% feudal recruits. After his death, English test barriers and vague interviews increased feudal share to 65% by 1965. Jinnah expected a grim future for Pakistan without reforms, and he was right. PakRaj initiated country's capture via malafide actions of Ghulam Muhammad and Iskander Mirza - both ex-ICS officers who carried contempt for politicians and democratic process. Using government-dismissal powers, they destroyed democracy between 1948 and 1958. Later, same provision serves a hanging sword over successive governments until last used by Musharraf in 2007. Mirza's tyranny led to martial law as he remained in power, but immediately replaced by Ayub's military dictatorship under judicial cover provided by Justice Munir — mother of all tragedies which State of Pakistan has yet to see, as its last judicial pillar fell. With that ended checks and balances system letting PakRaj do as it pleases. Institutional failures followed: Ayub's failed idea of basic democracies, Bangladesh's creation in 1971, and cycles of dictatorship and managed democracy — Bhutto, Zia, Benazir, Musharraf, Sharifs, Imran, PDM versions. Each rule made institutional decay worse. Why? PakRaj response has been always in "National Interest" (framed as required); over time they became all powerful entity beyond imagination, meanwhile joined by opportunistic politicians, industrialists, businesses tycoons and enablers. So, they control state and operate unaccountably. Period. It would be unfair not to see their performance accumulated over time, which can be evaluated under Scripture's guidance "By their fruits ye shall know them" (Matthew 7:16). The harvest has been bitter. Governance has collapsed: Pakistan ranks poorly globally — all in worst tiers: Corruption 135, Rule of law 129, Political change 100, Governance 122, among others. Economy is equally damning: FY25 shows growth is just 2.68% (target 3.6%) creating more poverty, which is made worse by an increasing population growing at 2.7% annually. Public debt stands at Rs76.01 trillion (74.60% of GDP) with servicing at Rs9.775 trillion (51% of federal spending). 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More of same suffering: development spending stays around 0.9% of GDP, health under 0.9%, education below 0.8% — warranting shameful "education emergency". Despite numerous national and international studies on countries' ailments and state commissions since 1949, PakRaj has set aside most recommendations and arrogantly ignored decades of real failures as country continues to decline. C'est la vie! Surely, PakRaj will not give up its power and privileges, nor can we expect them to; I along with them and masses await the coming reckoning, as John Elia said: Hashar main bataon ga tujhy Jo hashar tu nay kiya hay mera What lies before us is a simple binary decision. Do nothing — Accept PakRaj's fiascos disguised as "success" in governance, economy and battlefield wins at mercy of US/China. Or, Do what must be done — Finish Jinnah's structural reforms. Empower educated middle class, entrepreneurs and professionals. 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