
Japan's growing Muslim population still needs burial plots
Muslim migrants and converts face opposition from the local community, especially in constructing cemeteries where they can conduct an Islamic burial.
While some local governments are considering establishing new burial cemeteries to accommodate foreign workers, the idea has not gone over well with some Japanese community leaders who have raised objections over what they say are sanitary concerns.
Muslims who are considering staying indefinitely in the country say the limited number of burial plots makes them anxious about their future.
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In December, Miyagi governor Yoshihiro Murai said he was considering building a new cemetery in the prefecture after a plea from a Muslim resident who told him that living in Japan 'is very difficult' for his family because of the lack of graves.
The prefecture in the Tohoku region in northeastern Japan exchanged memorandums (written messages) with the Indonesian government in 2023 regarding securing workers to support local industries.
Indonesia has the largest Muslim population in the world. The Quran, the holy book of Islam, says that Muslims must be buried. Cremation is strictly forbidden.
'I feel that the government should be more concerned about the lack of attention to multiculturalism, even though it claims to be a multicultural society,' said Murai, pointing out that there are no burial cemeteries in the Tohoku region. 'Even if I am criticised, we have to do something about this,' he added.
At 99.97 per cent, Japan has one of the highest cremation rates in the world. Photo: Shutterstock
Elsewhere, a construction project for a large burial cemetery promoted by the Beppu Muslim Association, a religious corporation in Hiji, Oita Prefecture, in southwestern Japan, has been put off indefinitely due to opposition from the town's mayor.
The plan initially seemed to be going well. In 2023, local residents approved the plan to sell land owned by the municipal government on condition it complied with ordinances for burial sites. The town did not object.
The apparent smooth progress of the plan was in contrast with the opposition aroused in 2018 by a plan to buy a different plot. That had triggered rumours about alleged harm, including the impact on groundwater quality.
For the current plan, the conditions included an agreement with the residents association where the planned site is located, promising no additional burials for 20 years in plots where burials have taken place and that the groundwater would be tested once a year.
However, the situation took a bleak turn when Tetsuya Abe, who opposed the plan over concerns about public health, won his inaugural mayoral election bid in August 2024.
The association's representative, Tahir Khan, was informed that Abe had no intention of selling the plot to be used as a cemetery after residents expressed concerns about the possible contamination of drinking water.
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According to an estimate by Hirofumi Tanada – professor emeritus at Waseda University, an expert on Muslim affairs in Japan – the country's Muslim population was around 350,000 as of the beginning of 2024 – over three times the 110,000 Muslims in 2010. Fifty-four thousand of those are Japanese converts to the religion.
In 1980, Japan had a total of four mosques in the entire country. The number is about 150 as of June 2024.
Still, there are only about 10 major locations with burial sites in Japan with religious affiliations, including Christian sites.
The law regarding burial sites does not prohibit ground interment (putting a dead body in its final resting place); local governments can establish them if they set requirements. But according to a national survey conducted in 2023, more than 99.9 per cent of cemeteries still only perform cremations.
Muslims stand under the dome of Tokyo Mosque, an elegant, marble mosque built in an Ottoman style. Photo: Reuters
Amid the domestic labour shortage, the government touts its efforts to accept more migrant workers and move toward the reality of an inclusive society. Abe, the Hiji mayor, says the issue of providing burial plots should not be left to municipalities, suggesting that the central government step in and establish guidelines.
In 2021, the Beppu Muslim Association petitioned the central government to establish a public cemetery where people can choose their burial method according to their faith, but 'there has been no change,' according to the association.
Khan, a university professor in Oita who came to Japan in 2001 and became a Japanese citizen, has a child born in Japan. 'We cannot give up on graves for the next generation's sake,' he said.
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HKFP
a day ago
- HKFP
Rubio meets China's Wang on sidelines of ASEAN talks
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi Friday on the sidelines of ASEAN talks in Malaysia, where Washington's tariffs are in sharp focus. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio attends the ASEAN Post-Ministerial Conference with the United States in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on July 10, 2025. Photo: ASEAN Malaysia 2025. Rubio and Wang's first face-to-face meeting since US President Donald Trump returned to office comes as Washington and Beijing are locked in disputes ranging from trade to Taiwan — and both powers vie for greater influence in the region. Rubio, a longtime China hawk, and Wang are in Kuala Lumpur for a gathering of foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which Japan, South Korea and Australia and other nations are also attending. US officials said ahead of Rubio's first trip to the region as secretary of state that Washington was 'prioritising' its commitment to East and Southeast Asia. Rubio said Thursday the United States has 'no intention of abandoning' the Asia-Pacific region. 'Indispensable relationship' But US tariffs have overshadowed the conference, and Rubio has sought to placate Asian trade partners, saying talks were ongoing and might result in 'better' rates than for the rest of the world. Trump has threatened punitive tariffs ranging from 20 to 50 percent against more than 20 countries, many of them in Asia, if they do not strike deals with Washington by August 1. This included long-time US ally Japan which faced a 25 percent across-the board levy, separate from similar charges for cars, steel and aluminium that have already been imposed. Seoul faced a similar tariff percentage. Earlier Friday Rubio met his Japanese and South Korean counterparts, with his spokeswoman Tammy Bruce calling it an 'indispensable relationship.' Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, however, said this week that tariffs were being used as 'sharpened instruments of geopolitical rivalry'. Wang on Thursday said the US tariff drive 'undermines the free trade system'. 'The United States' imposition of high tariffs on Cambodia and Southeast Asian countries is an attempt to deprive all parties of their legitimate rights to development,' Wang said. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi attends a meeting with ASEAN, Japan's and South Korea's foreign ministers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on July 10, 2025. Photo: ASEAN Malaysia 2025. Tensions between Washington and Beijing have ratcheted up since Trump took office in January, with both countries engaging in a tariff war that briefly sent duties on each other's exports sky-high. At one point the United States hit China with additional levies of 145 percent on its goods as both sides engaged in tit-for-tat escalation. China's countermeasures on US goods reached 125 percent. Beijing and Washington agreed in May to temporarily slash their staggeringly high tariffs — an outcome Trump dubbed a 'total reset'. Taiwan, South China Sea Before becoming Secretary of State in January, Rubio had already been one of the most vocal critics of China on the American political stage for many years. Rubio and Wang are also likely to discuss US concerns over China's expansionary behaviour in the South China Sea and Beijing's growing military pressure on Taiwan. China claims the democratic self-ruled island as part of its territory and has threatened to use force to bring it under its control. Like most countries, Washington has no formal diplomatic relations with the island. However, the United States is Taiwan's biggest arms supplier and has shown increasing support for Taipei in the face of Beijing's growing military pressure on the island in recent years. US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth accused China in late May of 'credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power' in the Asia-Pacific region. He also claimed that Beijing 'trains every day' to invade Taiwan. In response, Chinese diplomats accused the United States of using the Taiwan issue to 'contain China' and called on Washington to stop 'playing with fire'. Dateline: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Type of Story: News Service Produced externally by an organization we trust to adhere to high journalistic standards. Help safeguard press freedom & keep HKFP free for all readers by supporting our team One-time Monthly One-time $150 $500 $1,000 Other Donation amount $ Monthly $150 $250 $500 Other Donation amount per month $ Members of HK$150/month unlock 8 benefits: An HKFP deer keyring or tote; exclusive Tim Hamlett columns; feature previews; merch drops/discounts; "behind the scenes" insights; a chance to join newsroom Q&As, early access to our Annual/Transparency Report & all third-party banner ads disabled. Join or donate instantly


AllAfrica
3 days ago
- AllAfrica
Investors beware: Japan, the long-presumed safe haven, is hit
The reimposition of steep US tariffs on Japanese goods should not have come as a surprise. Yet, the global investment community has largely responded with indifference. That's a mistake because the significance of Japan's inclusion in the new wave of 'reciprocal tariffs' from the Trump administration goes far beyond headline rates or temporary trade friction. This is not simply a trade dispute; it's a signal that marks a deeper decoupling between the United States and its traditional economic partners in Asia, and one that forces a profound rethink of investment strategy in the world's most interconnected region. Japan's 25% tariff rate – set to take effect on August 1 – comes after months of calibrated pressure. Initially framed as a negotiating tactic back in April, the tariffs are now policy. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's response was characteristically measured, calling the move 'truly regrettable' while recommitting to talks. However, beneath the diplomatic tone lies an undeniable truth: Japan is being pulled into the gravity of a new global trade order where loyalty no longer guarantees exemption. This should concern investors – not just in Tokyo or Seoul, but in Frankfurt, London, Singapore and New York. For decades, Japan has occupied a unique position. It's been a geopolitical ally of the United States, a cornerstone of the rules-based trade system and a technological powerhouse driving growth across the Asia-Pacific. It's been treated, in policy terms and in the minds of investors, as the exception to the volatility that has plagued other export-driven economies. That mental model is no longer viable. The implications of Japan's tariff exposure aren't limited to the Nikkei or the yen. They extend across multiple asset classes, industries and regional dynamics. Consider, for instance, the impact on the pan-Asian supply chain. Japan's advanced components – particularly in semiconductors, autos and precision machinery – are integral to production systems stretching from Malaysia to Vietnam. Disruptions at the Japanese node will reverberate across these networks, raising input costs, elongating delivery timelines and destabilizing margins. We're already seeing other regional economies scramble to reposition. South Korea is pushing Washington for tariff reductions on cars and steel. Malaysia has reiterated its commitment to negotiating a more 'balanced' trade framework. Thailand, facing a 36% tariff on its exports, has publicly expressed hope – but not confidence – that the rate might be lowered. These aren't marginal economies. They're core in Asia's trade architecture, and they are now contending with significant uncertainty. For investors, this evolving backdrop demands urgent reassessment. The most immediate channel of transmission is through currency markets. Tariff pressure will amplify depreciation incentives across several Asian currencies – notably the yen, won, and baht—as governments seek to preserve export competitiveness. That introduces risk and opportunity in equal measure. For unhedged investors in Japanese or regional equities, this could quietly erode returns. For currency traders and global macro funds, it's a dynamic to be actively priced. More broadly, Japan's vulnerability undermines a key pillar of regional risk management. Historically, if volatility rose in China or emerging Asia, capital would rotate into Japanese assets as a relative safe haven. That reflex is now being challenged. With Japan itself caught in the geopolitical crossfire, we could see a more complicated, less predictable pattern of regional capital flows, particularly as institutional investors recalibrate Asia exposure in search of insulation from policy shocks. There is also the inflation question. Tariffs, by design, raise prices – directly through higher duties and indirectly through bottlenecks. With Asia still absorbing the effects of higher interest rates, the introduction of trade-based price shocks complicates the macro environment. Central banks from Tokyo to Jakarta must now weigh the need to support growth against the risk of imported inflation. That balancing act is already difficult and these tariffs tilt the scale further. The architecture of trade in Asia is shifting. And investors should anticipate that shift accelerating. Some countries – Vietnam, India, Indonesia – may benefit from re-shored investment or supply chain diversification. But even they must manage the complexity of overlapping regulatory regimes, new bilateral demands and increasingly binary strategic alignments between China and the US. This is the deeper trend: the end of a single, cohesive Asian growth story. We're moving into a landscape where economic outcomes in the region are increasingly dictated by how governments manage their exposure to geopolitical risk, rather than by structural productivity gains or demographic tailwinds alone. This changes the calculus for everything from portfolio construction to FX hedging, from corporate earnings projections to sovereign debt pricing. In that context, the idea that Japan can absorb this latest round of tariffs and return to normality is dangerously complacent. It ignores the evolving reality that globalization – at least in its pre-2016 form – is not merely fraying; it is being dismantled consciously. From an investor's perspective, this demands two simultaneous actions. First, risk mitigation: trimming exposure to vulnerable sectors, re-evaluating yen-linked positions and stress-testing Asia portfolios under a sustained fragmentation scenario. Second, opportunity capture: identifying new regional winners, particularly those with domestic demand resilience, favorable trade relations and technological independence. But, most of all, it requires mental adaptation. The notion that Japan is immune to geopolitical risk because of its alignment with the US is no longer credible. Investors who fail to internalize that will likely misprice Asia for years to come. Markets are not yet fully awake to this. But they will be. August 1, the day Japan's tariffs take effect, may well be remembered as the moment that shifted perceptions, not just policy. Nigel Green is CEO of deVere Group .


AllAfrica
3 days ago
- AllAfrica
China wins as Trump's ‘Tariff Man' act trashes Japan's 2025
TOKYO — As if Japan's economy weren't having a rotten enough 2025, Donald Trump just upped the pressure exponentially with a 25% tariff. The same day Tokyo got disastrous news from Washington, data showed that real wages in Japan fell the fastest in 20 months in May. The 2.9% year-on-year drop marks the fifth consecutive month in which wages fell. This is bad news on a number of levels. Not least of which is that 2025 was supposed to be the year Japan's long-coveted virtuous cycle finally arrived to hasten consumer spending and broader economic growth. In spring 2024, unions scored the biggest wage increase in 33 years — 5.28%. By year-end, though, the increase failed to materialize. Wages ended 2024 essentially flat. Then came US President Trump's trade war, which is making wage gains even less likely. Might wage cuts now be the question? The 25% import tax that Trump just slapped on Japan, effective August, will be layered on top of his 25% auto tariff. 'If the high tariffs persist, negative effects on exports and capital investment will be unavoidable,' says Takeshi Yamaguchi, chief Japan economist at Morgan Stanley MUFG. As much as this is a loss for Japan, the return of 'Tariff Man' is a win for China. Japan isn't alone this week. Trump hit close US ally South Korea with a 25% wallop, while his administration shocked Southeast Asia with outsize tariffs. He slapped a 32% tax on Indonesia, 36% on Cambodia, 40% on Laos, 40% on Myanmar. Trump risks single-handedly assembling a China-Japan-Korea-Southwest Asia bloc, something that Xi Jinping's inner circle could never have done on its own. Certainly, Trump just gave Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and new Korean President Lee Jae Myung a fresh reason to join forces. And to take seriously signals from Beijing that a three-way free-trade deal could be in the cards. An immediate loser is the Bank of Japan, which spent the last year working to normalizing interest rates. 'With wage growth stumbling and inflation proving sticky, the BoJ's job will get much harder,' says Stefan Angrick, senior economist at Moody's Analytics. Also, Angrick says, 'this casts a long shadow over the upper house election on 20 July,' when Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party had hoped to win back an outright majority in parliament. Ishiba could always try to rush a US trade deal into existence before August, but likely at great cost for Japan's commercial interests. But as Ishiba said this week about Trump's threats, 'we will not easily compromise. That's why it is taking time and why it is tough' to do a deal. Angrick adds that the 'fact that pay growth is slowing is hardly surprising, given the flurry of shocks hitting the Japanese economy since the start of the year. US tariffs and tariff threats have damaged Japanese manufacturing, created uncertainty, and delayed investment in capital and in workers.' But, Angrick adds, 'it's sobering that underlying wage growth hasn't proven more resilient, even after shunto wage negotiations from 2023 to 2025 produced multi-decade record results. With US-Japan trade talks stuck … the economic outlook is incredibly challenging.' For BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda, 'justifying' additional 'rate hikes will get tougher if pay keeps sliding,' Angrick concludes. At the same time, prospects for lower US interest rates are dwindling. Considering higher oil prices, ever-rising tariffs and immigration restrictions in the US, 'the bottom line is that we should see inflation move higher over the coming months,' notes Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management. It's but one example of how Trump risks sabotaging his own economy. At the moment, Scott Wren, global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, thinks Wall Street consensus is 'overly optimistic on the tariff outlook.' Wren worries the feedback effects from tariffs will slam US growth. 'Our feeling is that stocks are ahead of themselves and, as a result, we are looking to trim positions in markets and sectors we find to be overvalued,' Wren explains. Others think the US economy won't necessarily be derailed by global headwinds. 'Our base case remains that the uncertainty around tariffs won't be enough on its own to bring the US economy to a crashing halt,' write analysts with Capital Economics. 'If so, it's unlikely to be enough to dampen investors' enthusiasm for US equities.' The wild card is how tariffs affect the outlook for consumer prices. the Capital Economics analysts say. 'It's been clear in recent weeks that many [Federal Reserve officials] are not confident about cutting rates until the inflationary effects of tariffs are clearer, and we doubt they'll cut this year.' Kai Wang, a strategist at Morningstar, thinks Asia will take tariff fallout in stride. 'Asian markets are treating the latest tariff move more as posturing than policy, with room still seen for dialogue,' he says. Yet throwing Japan under the proverbial bus raises tantalizing questions, including how Tokyo leverages the US$1.1 trillion worth of US Treasuries it owns. As Morgan Stanley's Yamaguchi asks: 'Will Japan use US Treasury holdings as a bargaining chip?' Yamaguchi's take is that it's unlikely under the current Ishiba administration. Yet in May, Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato raised eyebrows around the globe by stating that 'everything that could be a bargaining chip should be on the table' regarding Japan's US Treasuries holdings. Though Kato later tried to walk back that statement, it remains a live question in market circles. This isn't the first time bond traders worried Tokyo might dump large blocks of Treasuries. In 1997, for example, then-Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto told a New York audience that 'several times in the past, we have been tempted to sell large lots of US Treasuries' to make a point. One such episode was the heated auto negotiations a few years earlier. This time, the intrigue involves the Trumpian turmoil already on full display. Back in April and May, the so-called 'bond vigilantes' literally screamed at the Trump administration over its tariffs. These activist traders sent US Treasury yields skyrocketing amid fears of the inflationary impact of Trump's trade war and the fiscal implications.