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The peace corps: Young Japanese emerge as ardent defenders of pacifist constitution

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Aki Okuda, founding member of the protest group SEALDs, shouts slogans during a protest outside parliament in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters

Wearing shorts and a baggy T-shirt and clutching a microphone, Aki Okuda stands before a crowd, the pyramid-shaped roof of Japan’s parliament lit up against the night sky behind him.

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“No War”, “Protect the Constitution”, “Abe - Quit!”, he chants in a hip-hop rhythm, echoed by the crowd.

Okuda, 23, is a founding member of a group of students that has become a fresh face of protest against Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s push to enact a more robust defence policy - steps critics say violate the pacifist constitution and could ensnare Japan in US-led wars.

Students Emergency Action for Liberal Democracy (SEALDs) is also denting the image of Japanese students as either apolitical introverts, who left protests to their elders, or rightwing geeks.

Japan has not seen significant student protests since the 1960s, and civic demonstrations since then have been peopled primarily with greying left-wing activists.

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That changed when SEALDs sprang to public notice by sponsoring weekly rallies near parliament against unpopular defence bills that Abe’s ruling bloc pushed through the lower house last month.

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