Newsletter No. 1131
News-Analysis
September 3, 2008
Mark Selden (Shingetsu Member No. 62) of Cornell
University asked me to write a short article on Kazuya Ito.
It was posted at Japan Focus yesterday. Some of this
repeats what we have already reported in the newsletter, but
there is also additional material on Pakistan and other matters
that we haven’t yet reported.
KAZUYA ITO: THE PRIDE OF THE NATION
By Michael Penn
On the morning of August 26, 2008, aid worker
Kazuya Ito arrived at work as usual. Four armed men suddenly
appeared and abducted him. Local people witnessed the abduction,
and a force of policemen and villagers gave chase into the mountains
above north of the village of Bodyalai near Dara-e-Noor, Nangarhar
Province, Afghanistan. The result was a tragedy: Ito was shot
three times in the leg and once in the left thigh. On the morning
following the abduction, his body was found by the local people:
Ito had bled to death.

Photo: Kazuya Ito in 2004
Source: Unknown
A graduate of a Shizuoka Agricultural Junior College, Ito went
to Afghanistan when he was twenty-six. He seems to have been
almost universally liked by those who met him. One of his classmates
remembered Ito as a “warmhearted, honest man.” The
local Afghan villagers are said to have had affectionate feelings
towards him as well. Children would gather around him calling
“Kazuya! Kazuya!” One of his Afghan working colleagues
recalled, “Ito never skimped his work.” When news
of his killing became known to the local people, one man commented:
“For Afghans, this is shameful.”
Ito had gone to Afghanistan as an agricultural
specialist for the Peshawar-kai, a Fukuoka-based aid organization
whose long experience in the region dates back to 1983. His
main work was to identify and grow crops such as sweet potatoes,
tea, and hay that could thrive in the barren Afghan soil. This
was part of the effort to reduce dependence on the poppies used
to make opium and heroin and boost villagers’ incomes.
As one of his Afghan colleagues noted, “He wanted to expand
legitimate agriculture.” He also worked on constructing
a twenty-mile irrigation canal from the Kunar River to a desert
area. By all accounts, Ito adapted very well to life in Afghanistan,
gaining a working command of the Pashtun language and seeming
comfortable in his surroundings. His Japanese friends began
to think that Ito might spend the rest of his life in Afghanistan.
That indeed became the case, although not in the sense they
intended.
Why was Kazuya Ito Killed?
It may not ever be known with certainty why
Ito was killed and what factors contributed to his tragedy.
It seems that this was a botched effort to abduct him, not a
premeditated murder. But there is a wider context to the slaying.
This year has seen a general deterioration of
security in Afghanistan. The Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan
Relief, which coordinates NGO groups working in Afghanistan,
reports that nineteen NGO workers were killed by Taliban militia
forces and bandits between January and July, surpassing the
total death toll in 2007.
Adil Shah, a suspect in Ito’s kidnapping
who was captured on site, reportedly told the Afghan intelligence
service that militants in Pakistan asked his group to abduct
a Japanese aid worker of Peshawar-kai, agreeing to pay a bounty
of roughly US$13,200. The suspect said that the motive was to
create a sense of political insecurity and to stop local aid
projects from succeeding.
On August 31st, Sayed Ansari, a spokesman for
the Afghan intelligence service, pointed the finger of blame
directly at Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) when speaking to Kyodo News. In an interview,
he claimed that the ISI “doesn’t want the rehabilitation
projects in Afghanistan. That is why by killing the engineers
of such projects they want to stop them.”
At this point it is difficult to verify such
claims, but the general notion that certain militant groups
in Pakistan -- official or unofficial -- are attempting to create
difficulties for the regime in Kabul seems plausible as a motive
for the kidnapping.
Another possible factor is that the Japanese
government had been mulling a Self-Defense Forces (SDF) deployment
to the Afghan interior in recent months. Although the plan for
a Japanese military deployment was scrapped in mid-July, the
prospect of such a mission was reported in the international
media on several occasions. In early June, when it appeared
likely that such a deployment would be authorized by the government,
Dr. Tetsu Nakamura, the leader of the Peshawar-kai, told the
media that if the SDF moved in, his aid organization would have
to move out: “What the locals need are bread and water.
Military activities will resolve nothing. Anti-Japanese sentiment
will increase and we will not be able to protect our Japanese
staff… The absence of Japanese troops in Afghanistan has
helped local people trust Japan, leading to our safety. Sending
the SDF amidst the worsening security situation would be foolish.”
Did the talk of SDF deployment intensify animosity
against Japan among militants, even though the plan was later
abandoned? Was this a factor that led to a decision to abduct
a Japanese aid worker? We cannot be sure. However, this seems
to be part of what the Japan Communist Party was driving at
in their party’s statement on the Ito slaying:
War only kills innocent people and creates
hatred. It is not a means by which terrorism can be eliminated.
To bring peace to Afghanistan and to protect the security of
NGO staff putting themselves on the line out there, we demand
that methods be used other than military force, such as political
and diplomatic solutions.
Ito’s slaying has led Japanese and other
NGOs and aid organization to reassess their programs in Afghanistan.
The Asahi Shinbun, for example, reported on August
29th that some support organizations were suspending or cutting
back their activities in Afghanistan, while restricting the
activities of personnel in that nation. Peshawar-kai Secretary-General
Mitsuji Fukumoto indicated that the group would pull back its
remaining eight Japanese workers in Afghanistan. The Association
for Aid and Relief, Japan (AAR Japan), which offers education
on how to avoid land mines, evacuated its two Japanese members
from Afghanistan. The Basic Human Needs Association, which offers
support in the telecommunications field, has scrapped plans
to dispatch two Japanese engineers to Afghanistan in October.
JICA on Tuesday ordered its two employees stationed in Jalalabad
not to venture outdoors. Two other NGOs, JEN and Save the Children
Japan, had already pulled out before the latest incident due
to worsening security conditions. The Shanti Volunteer Association,
however, said it would not pull out its worker in Afghanistan
who has been engaged in school construction.
Kazuya Ito: The Pride of the Nation
Discussion of the political factors involved
in the killing of Kazuya Ito should not be allowed to overshadow
the story of this extraordinary man and his work. How many young
Japanese -- or anybody else -- are willing to leave their country
and toil on behalf of a people of whom they know little? How
many win over all with whom they associate, in any country,
through their kindness and devotion? How many are willing to
take such a physical risk for peace? Only thirty-one years old
when he died, this young man leaves behind a legacy of commitment.
Local Afghan villagers, whose respect and affection he earned,
have pledged to carry on his work.
On his June 2003 job application at Peshawar-kai,
Ito explained that he had never even heard of a country called
“Afghanistan” before September 11. However, when
a lecturer described it as “a forgotten country,”
he was moved to learn more and to think about what he could
do to help. Ito wrote:
What I want is for Afghanistan to become
a green and fertile country again. But this is not something
that can be done in just two or three years. I believe that
I can help the children's future by helping to ensure that they
can live in an environment without food scarcity. I don't take
this task lightly, as I am sure that the environment there is
tough. But if you don't go out there and get on the ground itself,
then you can't begin anything.
Kazuya Ito was never given the chance to finish
his work in Afghanistan, but he certainly did begin something.
His father, Masayuki Ito, told the press: “I can say with
confidence that Kazuya is our family’s pride.” It’s
easy to understand his father’s sentiment. But a young
man like this was more than his family’s pride -- he was
Japan’s pride too.