
Why Indonesians behaving badly in Japan fuels official concerns
Japan has fuelled talk of a looming ban on workers from the Southeast Asian nation, prompting officials in Jakarta to dismiss the speculation.
A robbery in Ibaraki prefecture, viral footage of unruly behaviour by an Indonesian group in Osaka and social media posts purporting to reflect the concerns of Japanese employers have stirred debate about Indonesian migrant workers' ability to adapt to Japanese norms and what Jakarta can do about it.
Indonesian officials warn that much of the backlash – and resulting panic – has been stoked by misinformation, with potentially serious repercussions for Indonesians seeking work overseas.
'Don't let just three people cause hundreds of thousands of potential [Indonesian] migrant workers to become victims,' said Abdul Kadir Karding,
Indonesia 's minister for the protection of migrant workers, on July 16, as quoted by state news agency Antara. 'This is made worse by posts containing inaccurate data.'
The minister was referring to the arrest of three Indonesian nationals in connection with a robbery in the city of Hokota, Ibaraki prefecture – a case that drew widespread media attention after Japanese police made arrests on June 30, nearly six months after the break-in.

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AllAfrica
2 days ago
- AllAfrica
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Despite questions about possible US retrenchment, senior Trump administration officials say they are committed to maintaining US leadership in the Asia-Pacific region. One of their primary stated US foreign policy goals is to rally friendly governments to block Chinese expansionism. Perhaps the clearest advantage the US enjoys in pursuit of that goal is a robust network of allies and security partners. As the competition with China reaches a critical stage, America needs the full strategic value of these partnerships—to help prevent Chinese domination of vital supply chains, to unitedly oppose Chinese coercion and aggression against individual countries, to offer bases for US forces, to be prepared to provide additional combat capability if needed and even to build ships for the US Navy. The administration's efforts to raise revenue and cut government expenditures, however, are at odds with the geostrategic task of facing up to the China challenge. 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HKFP
2 days ago
- HKFP
Attacker wounds Japanese national in China with rock, Tokyo embassy says
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AllAfrica
3 days ago
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