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良い警察官と悪い警察官
良い警察官と悪い警察官
ここ数ヵ月の相次ぐ不祥事のせいで、
世間では警察官に対する不信感が高まっている。
しかし、過剰報道などによって
国民の客観性もずいぶん失われているようだ。
Good Cops and Bad Cops
By SCOTT T. HARDS
Japan's police just cannot seem to do anything right these days. Over the past months,
it's been day after day of apologies and endless numbers of pledges by government
and police officials to "work to regain the public's trust." Just how bad is it
really? Is the safety of Japan's citizens being overseen by a bunch of corrupt incompetents?
When I consider my own experiences with Japanese police, I get a different
impression. When asking directions at a koban, I have universally been given
friendly advice and a smile. I even got polite treatment from two officers patrolling
the Tohoku expressway last year as they wrote me a ticket for speeding
(whoops!).
And I love to watch those TV "reality" programs showing the police in action as
they go about their jobs protecting innocent citizens. "Selfless dedication" is
the phrase that comes to mind.
Many point out that the problems lie not with these rank and file officers,
but with the so-called "career" officials. I've heard about high-ranking police
officials who have never stood in a koban, or carried out an investigation, or made an arrest.
And certainly, if these tales are true, it is time to overhaul the police
personnel system. Their leaders need to be more in touch with frontline police work
if they hope to earn the respect of the "noncareer" officers. Fortunately, it
appears that the government is already considering such measures.
What concerns me, however, is that this wave of media overkill about what are
often minor problems is creating public distrust of the police that is not justified.
Take the example from Niigata. The top police official there was forced to resign
when he made the very poor decision to continue drinking and playing mah-jongg despite
news that a girl who had been missing for nine years had been located.
Although he quit, opinion polls showed sentiment that his punishment was too
light. Many said he should have been fired and should have surrendered his
retirement pay, over ¥30 million.
Wait a minute! That's an awfully steep fine for an ill-advised night of drinking
-- a police rules violation, yes, but not a crime punishable in court. Where has
objectivity gone?
Worse, seeking to exploit this wave of public dissatisfaction, Japan's opposition parties have submitted a bill to revoke the law passed last year that grants the
police the ability to tap phone lines. "We just cannot trust them," says Yukio
Hatoyama of the Democratic Party of Japan.
What nonsense. A few examples of internal rules violations and minor crimes are
hardly cause to strip the police of a major weapon needed in the fight against
crime. Using that same logic, you might as well tell the police to give up their guns,
too!
Certainly Japan's police have some problems to work on. When you give a group of
people special powers, there are always those who will abuse them. Just look at the
police in other nations for evidence of that. But this is no time for the public to
abandon their trust in what is mostly a hard-working force of people who contribute
greatly to making this country one of the safest on the planet.
Japan's police just cannot seem to do anything right these days. Over the past months,
it's been day after day of apologies and endless numbers of pledges by government
and police officials to "work to regain the public's trust." Just how bad is it
really? Is the safety of Japan's citizens being overseen by a bunch of corrupt incompetents?
When I consider my own experiences with Japanese police, I get a different
impression. When asking directions at a koban, I have universally been given
friendly advice and a smile. I even got polite treatment from two officers patrolling
the Tohoku expressway last year as they wrote me a ticket for speeding
(whoops!).
And I love to watch those TV "reality" programs showing the police in action as
they go about their jobs protecting innocent citizens. "Selfless dedication" is
the phrase that comes to mind.
Many point out that the problems lie not with these rank and file officers,
but with the so-called "career" officials. I've heard about high-ranking police
officials who have never stood in a koban, or carried out an investigation, or made an arrest.
And certainly, if these tales are true, it is time to overhaul the police
personnel system. Their leaders need to be more in touch with frontline police work
if they hope to earn the respect of the "noncareer" officers. Fortunately, it
appears that the government is already considering such measures.
What concerns me, however, is that this wave of media overkill about what are
often minor problems is creating public distrust of the police that is not justified.
Take the example from Niigata. The top police official there was forced to resign
when he made the very poor decision to continue drinking and playing mah-jongg despite
news that a girl who had been missing for nine years had been located.
Although he quit, opinion polls showed sentiment that his punishment was too
light. Many said he should have been fired and should have surrendered his
retirement pay, over ¥30 million.
Wait a minute! That's an awfully steep fine for an ill-advised night of drinking
-- a police rules violation, yes, but not a crime punishable in court. Where has
objectivity gone?
Worse, seeking to exploit this wave of public dissatisfaction, Japan's opposition parties have submitted a bill to revoke the law passed last year that grants the
police the ability to tap phone lines. "We just cannot trust them," says Yukio
Hatoyama of the Democratic Party of Japan.
What nonsense. A few examples of internal rules violations and minor crimes are
hardly cause to strip the police of a major weapon needed in the fight against
crime. Using that same logic, you might as well tell the police to give up their guns,
too!
Certainly Japan's police have some problems to work on. When you give a group of
people special powers, there are always those who will abuse them. Just look at the
police in other nations for evidence of that. But this is no time for the public to
abandon their trust in what is mostly a hard-working force of people who contribute
greatly to making this country one of the safest on the planet.
Shukan ST: April 21, 2000
(C) All rights reserved
- day after day of 〜
- 来る日も来る日も続く 〜
- apologies
- おわび
- pledges
- 誓い
- regain
- 取り戻す
- being overseen by 〜
- 〜 に見守られて
- a bunch of 〜
- 〜 の一団
- corrupt incompetents
- 堕落した無能な人
- impression
- 印象
- asking directions
- 道を尋ねる
- universally
- 例外なく
- polite treatment
- 礼儀正しい扱い
- expressway
- 高速道路
- speeding
- スピード違反
- whoops!
- おっと
- go about 〜
- 〜 に取り組む
- innocent
- 罪のない
- "Selfless dedication"
- 無私の献身
- comes to mind
- 思い浮かぶ
- point out
- 指摘する
- problems lie not with 〜 but with 〜
- 問題は 〜 ではなく 〜 の方だ
- rank and file officers
- 一般警官
- so-called
- いわゆる
- "career"officials
- キャリア組(国家公務員試験・種の合格者で、本庁に採用されている人たち)
- (have never)carried out an investigation
- 捜査活動を行なったことがない
- (have never)made an arrest
- 逮捕したことがない
- overhaul
- 綿密に検討する
- personnel
- 人事の
- be more in touch with 〜
- もっと 〜 に関わる
- frontline
- 第一線の
- earn the respect
- 敬意を勝ち取る
- measures
- 処置
- What concerns me(is that 〜 )
- 私が気になるのは 〜 だ
- media overkill
- マスコミの過剰反応
- distrust
- 不信
- is not justified
- 正当だといえない
- resign
- 辞職する
- mah-jongg
- 麻雀
- had been missing
- 行方不明になっていた
- quit
- 辞職した
- opinion polls
- 世論調査
- sentiment
- 意見
- should have been fired
- 解雇されるべきだった
- should have surrendered 〜
- 〜 を辞退すべきだった
- retirement pay
- 退職金
- awfully
- ひどく
- steep fine
- 法外な罰金
- ill-advised
- 軽率な
- objectivity
- 客観性
- exploit
- 利用する
- opposition parties
- 野党
- have submitted 〜
- 〜 を提出した
- bill
- 法案
- revoke
- 取り消す
- grants
- 許可する
- tap phone lines
- 電話を傍受する
- Democratic Party of Japan
- 民主党
- nonsense
- ばかげたこと
- internal rules violations
- 内部規則の違反
- strip 〜 of 〜
- 〜 から 〜 を奪う
- weapon
- 武器
- abuse
- 乱用する
- evidence
- 証拠
- abandon
- 捨てる
- contribute(to 〜 )
- 〜 に貢献する