Friday, February 09, 2007

In Japan, even the underworld is polite

I am not sure that you would see this degree of co-operation in, say, the Mafia:

The nation's two largest underworld syndicates reached a truce Thursday following recent shootings that sparked fears of a full-scale turf war and prompted police to raid one of the groups believed involved in the violence.

Kobe-based Yamaguchi-gumi and Tokyo-based Sumiyoshi-kai separately reported to the Metropolitan Police Department on Thursday afternoon that they made peace in the wake of Monday's gunning down of a senior Sumiyoshi-kai member, MPD officials said.

Investigators hope the recent violence -- believed part of a turf war between the two crime syndicates -- will halt with Thursday's truce, but said they will continue to monitor the mob's activities.

Nice of them to keep everyone informed.

From another part of the Japan Times, there is an article about the number of Yakuza the police know about:

Full-time yakuza numbered 41,500, while part-timers or semiregular members -- those not directly affiliated with the mob -- increased slightly to 43,200. In 1991, there were an estimated 63,800 full-time mobsters, and some 27,200 part-timers.

In reality, yakuza are appearing to detach themselves from full-time mob activity by engaging in business, political or social activities in a bid to camouflage their underworld affiliation, the NPA said.

This yakuza system is difficult to understand from the Western point of view. It seems extremely well tracked by the police, which makes it sound semi-tolerated. I should go looking around the internet for some background information...

3 comments:

Caz said...

Does this mean they get to write "full time mobster" on their tax return?

Steve said...

Maybe..:)

Actually, tracking yakusa may not be so hard because they are virtually the only people in Japan who would consider getting a tattoo. The tattoo being just a fashion statement amongst the young has never caught on there.

Caz said...

How intriguing. I would not have known that tattoos are culturally on the out in Japan, but that's only on the basis of the number of Asian inspired tattoo designs that are so popular in the West. I don't mean just Asian lettering either (I have two Chinese symbols on one bicep), but glorious Asian themed pictures. It leads to an assumption that tattoos are not uncommon in Asian countries. The Japanese are possibly very sensible in this regard.