Japanese Reporter Says Barring Him from Syria Sets Bad Precedent


Japanese Reporter Says Barring Him from Syria Sets Bad Precedent

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – A Japanese photo journalist whose passport was confiscated by the government ahead of a planned trip to Syria said his case sets a dangerous precedent for other journalists traveling abroad to report on foreign wars.

In an unprecedented move, Japan's Foreign Ministry seized freelance photographer Yuichi Sugimoto's passport this month as it steps up security after the execution of two Japanese nationals captured by Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants.

"I am concerned that this case might set a very bad precedent in this country. In the future, other journalists might have orders issued and their passports confiscated," Sugimoto told a news conference on Thursday.

"The freedom to report, the freedom to cover news might be harmed," he was quoted as saying by Reuters.

Sugimoto, who has covered wars in Bosnia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria for the past two decades, had originally planned to travel later this month to the town of Kobani, which was retaken last week by Syrian Kurds backed by US air strikes.

He said ministry officials and policemen visited his apartment in Niigata, northern Japan, this month and told him he would be arrested if he did not hand in his passport.

"I asked them when I would be able to get my passport back and they said they could keep it for an unlimited time," said Sugimoto. Officials also did not tell him how he could have his passport returned, he said.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said this week the government wants to respect the freedom of journalists to report but decided it must fulfill its duty to ensure the safety of Japanese nationals.

Sugimoto said he did not plan on traveling to areas controlled by ISIL, the radical group that beheaded freelance journalist Kenji Goto and self-styled adventurer Haruna Yukawa last month.

In a video purporting to portray Goto's killing, the group warned Japanese nationals would be targeted for further attacks.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has vowed never to "give in to terrorism", saying Japan would continue humanitarian aid to countries battling the ISIL group and would bring the killers to justice.

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