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Words near each other
・ SEAlang library
・ Sealant
・ Sealark Channel
・ Sealaska Corporation
・ Sealcoat
・ Seald Sweet International
・ Sealdah (Vidhan Sabha constituency)
・ Sealdah Ballia Express
・ Sealdah Puri Duronto Express
・ Sealdah railway station
・ Sealdah Rajdhani Express
・ Sealdah South lines
・ Sealdah – New Delhi Duronto Express
・ Sealdah–Hasnabad–Bangaon–Ranaghat line
・ Sealdah–Ranaghat line
SEALDs
・ Seale
・ Seale and Sands
・ Seale baronets
・ Seale Chalk Pit
・ Seale Harris
・ Seale, Alabama
・ Seale, Surrey
・ Seale-Hayne College
・ Sealed (album)
・ Sealed Air
・ Sealed beam
・ Sealed birth records
・ Sealed bottles
・ Sealed Cargo


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SEALDs : ウィキペディア英語版
SEALDs

SEALDs, short for , is a student activist organization in Japan that organizes protests against the ruling coalition headed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who advocate a set of security-related bills that would reinterpret the Constitution and allow the Japanese Self-Defense Force to be deployed overseas.
Most of the core members of the SEALDs were involved with the predecessor movement Students Against Secret Protection Law (SASPL) that protested Shinzo Abe's Special Secrecy Law from February to December 2014. With the secrecy law being passed, the members went on to form SEALDs on May 3, 2015, Constitution Memorial Day in Japan, to highlight what they believed was Shinzo Abe's blatant disregard of the constitution. They were especially worried that the Abe cabinet, which enjoyed a majority in the National Diet, would railroad their legislation to reinterpret Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution allowing Japan to exercise the right of collective self-defence and potentially send troops on foreign soil.〔 (Such legislation was passed on September 19, 2015.)
On August 30, 2015, the SEALDs was among the tens of thousands of protesters to surround the National Diet Building in Tokyo, with estimates of the crowd ranging from 30,000 to 120,000. Such a large student movement had not emerged in Japan since the anti-war protests of the 1960s, which forced Shinzo Abe's grandfather Nobusuke Kishi to resign as prime minister.〔 In contrast to the Zengakuren whose radicalism eventually alienated the public in the 1960s, the SEALDs were described to be moderate and non-partisan.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「SEALDs」の詳細全文を読む



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