The Japanese government’s plans to tighten espionage and secrecy legislation have been welcomed as a necessary bulwark at a time of deepening national security concerns, although analysts fear that any revisions will be too broad and could be used to stifle free speech and media freedom.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a long-time proponent of tightening rules on espionage and secrecy, was already formulating policies before she took office in October.
On November 26, Takaichi told a Diet session...
Japan’s proposal to ‘speedily draft’ anti-spy laws raises human rights concerns
Published 8 hours ago
Source: scmp.com

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