- Oct 2, 2009
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Japan to tighten its rules on foreign entertainers
2006/3/14
TOKYO, Reuters
Japan will prohibit companies with links to organized crime from bringing foreign singers and dancers into the country from later this year, in an attempt to crack down on human trafficking.
Tokyo was long known for handing out "entertainer" visas relatively liberally, a practice that activists said left women vulnerable to abuse such as being pressured into prostitution, but criteria for issuing the visas were tightened last year.
A Justice Ministry official said Monday that regulations will be tightened still further from June 1 to prevent organized crime organizations or anybody who has been a crime syndicate member in the past five years from sponsoring foreign entertainers.
The companies will also have to promise to pay the entertainers -- thousands of whom are from the Philippines, with many also coming from Thailand -- more than 200,000 yen (US$1,680) a month.
"There are many groups out there that abuse these women, so we wanted to tighten rules on this," the official said.
"By requiring each company to pay the women properly, we hope this will also help keep them from being forced into prostitution."
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asiapacific/detail.asp?ID=78600&GRP=C
2006/3/14
TOKYO, Reuters
Japan will prohibit companies with links to organized crime from bringing foreign singers and dancers into the country from later this year, in an attempt to crack down on human trafficking.
Tokyo was long known for handing out "entertainer" visas relatively liberally, a practice that activists said left women vulnerable to abuse such as being pressured into prostitution, but criteria for issuing the visas were tightened last year.
A Justice Ministry official said Monday that regulations will be tightened still further from June 1 to prevent organized crime organizations or anybody who has been a crime syndicate member in the past five years from sponsoring foreign entertainers.
The companies will also have to promise to pay the entertainers -- thousands of whom are from the Philippines, with many also coming from Thailand -- more than 200,000 yen (US$1,680) a month.
"There are many groups out there that abuse these women, so we wanted to tighten rules on this," the official said.
"By requiring each company to pay the women properly, we hope this will also help keep them from being forced into prostitution."
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asiapacific/detail.asp?ID=78600&GRP=C