Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles It's just before 5am. A small convoy is headed through the outskirts of Tokyo. On board, a band of plain clothed immigration officers. They're working on a tip off. Their targets are illegal immigrants who overstayed their visas or entered the country illegally. Have you got visas? Did all of you come by ship? Instead of the two illegal Chinese workers they expect to find here, there are six, all smuggled into the country by ship. It's a rare moment of satisfaction, raids like this are virtually an everyday occurrence. But these immigration officers are acutely aware they're merely chipping away at a vast hidden mass of humanity. As fast as they catch them, there are more to take their place. The immigration bureau cannot solve the problem alone. We need the cooperation of the various government agencies, and also with those countries from where we have the so many people coming. Immigration officials raid as much as they Immigration officials raid as much as they can but the reality is they don't have enough staff to catch them all. Really, I think what they're doing is nothing but a drop in the ocean. This is Japan's frontline defence against the tide of illegal workers coming into the country. A patrol squad from the Maritime Safety Agency. The constant run of shipping traffic makes it virtually impossible for teams like this to monitor all vessels. The Shun An Xing is a Chinese cargo ship that docked before dawn. Immigration We're going to conduct an inspection from this point on.Okay. Even if there were stowaways, they're long gone by the time we board mid-morning. Still, they comb the ship looking for telltale signs -- fresh paint, new bolts -- anything that tells them of a secret compartment big enough to hide a body. Of all the illegal workers who enter Japan, smuggling by ship is by far the most popular among the Chinese, who account for 95 percent of the hundreds of stowaways already caught this year. In 1997 there was a big increase in illegal entries. Last year it decreased a bit but this year it will peak. Probably it will break the record of 1997. Many come and work at restaurants washing dishes and waitressing. Many do cleaning jobs too -- like cleaning buildings. In the entertainment districts like Kabukicho the women work as hostesses. Chinese author and investigative journalist, Mo Bang Fu, has long reported on the Chinese gangs that wallow in the trade of illegal immigrants into Japan. Chinese gangs called Snakeheads have moved in and now work hand in hand with the Japanese Mafia, the Yakuza. The Snakeheads are trying to make more money illegally namely by arranging smuggling. In order to attract a lot of customers as stowaways they're discounting their fees for a successful smuggling attempt. In some case they cut the fee by as much as half. Chinese living in Japan face entrenched racism and distrust, and yet a blind eye is often turned to illegal Chinese workers because of the jobs they do -- the so called 3D jobs. Work that's dangerous, dirty or difficult. This is the biggest haul of amphetamines ever made in Japan -- 616 kilograms have been uncovered. Police and maritime safety officials have arrested one Japanese and eight non-Japanese including Taiwanese. Now, however, that tolerance is running out as Japan discovers it has imported more than cheap labour. According to Fukuoka police the suspect "Ho" and others were caught at 9p.m. last night trying to smuggle the amphetamines onto Kurose beach, in Kagoshima prefecture. They're suspected of violating Japan's control laws. Two mainland Chinese and five Taiwanese Chinese have been arrested in this, Japan's biggest drug bust. It's part of a growing crime wave involving illegal immigrants. At first the crimes were only conducted against At first the crimes were only conducted against other Chinese but lately the targets have increasingly been Japanese. The next move has been to make money fast through robbery, abduction and murder -- which they're now doing. Japan has realised this cheap labour is not worth the social cost. The demand for all these immigration bureau has been so drastically, quickly increased, and of course although we could increase the number of personnel of our bureau, it could not catch up with the demand side. So still we have the gap. Short staffed, under funded -- these problems are compounded by a law enforcement system in which agencies simply don't talk enough. Police, immigration, Maritime Safety Agency, Foreign Affairs -- illegal immigrants are slipping through the gaps in communication. There are a number of bottlenecks in establishing very efficient system, among all the government departments concerned. So at the moment they're not cooperating as well as they could? Well we are, we are of course cooperating, but the means of our communication, of course, is not so, well, highly sophisticated everywhere. Japan's 300,000 or so illegal immigrants are not so hard to find. It took us a couple of weeks, one or two connections, and a finder's fee that went to a middleman introduced to me only as Mr. Chin. He brought me to an apartment to meet one such immigrant -- 38 year Lin Hui. Lin lives in this one room, two and a half metres by nine metres, with four other men, all of them smuggled into Japan. Lin has been here six and a half years. I heard many people earned money easily in Japan. My neighbours who came back from Japan became rich -- that's why I came to Japan. Snakeheads organised his passage and they don't take poor Chinese. His fee was equivalent to $35,000 Australian. It was a perilous voyage. An agreement was made to pay within a week but if I hadn't paid sooner, I'd have been beaten to death. He's found plenty of work, much of it in the construction industry, which asks no tricky questions about passports and visas, and always wants cheap labour. He's paid for his passage, built a new three storey house and furnished it for his wife and two children back in Fuchien Province. From the bottom of my heart, I want to go home -- but it wasn't easy to come to Japan. Whenever I go out drinking with my friends they often say they want to go home -- and I feel the same. When I think about it calmly though, I know it was so hard to get to Japan that I want to be patient enough to stay here a bit longer. Tens of thousands of illegal workers secretly live this way, he says. In the old days we could make a lot of money but now it's becoming difficult. Now I tell them at home not to come. But they don't believe me. One important area in which we have been working is to keep in close touch with the Chinese authorities, encouraging the authorities there to send out a very clear message that this is something which is firstly illegal, and secondly, very dangerous. The message doesn't seem to be getting through in China. Daily, more risk their lives on the hazardous journey by sea. These men, shown here in an Immigration Department video, were lucky. They were caught by officials. A group of eight Chinese were not so lucky last summer -- they perished in the appalling heat in containers sitting on the dock just like this. Their bodies were found days later. If Japan has finally realised the need to step up its own efforts, it has had little success convincing China to stop the flow at its origins. There have been intensive consultations at diplomatic level, consular consultations and so forth, but we expect that very soon we'll have in place regular consultation between the law enforcement authorities of our two governments, and the idea is to ask for their cooperation in imposing stricter control. Look closer however, and there's no timetable for this new law enforcement cooperation. No real plan on how to stop the likes of these men coming in. Five of the six have been here a year or less; they haven't earned enough money to pay the Chinese gang that smuggled them in, and they're panicking at the prospect of what awaits them at home when they're deported. How else will five of them pay back the fee they owe to Snakeheads if they don't return to Japan to work. How else will they hold the hope of making a better life for their families in China, if not with money made in Japan. When their Japanese is better and their clothes and appearance look like everyone else's in town, they won't stand out as suspicious in this society. You won't be able to tell at a glance whether they're Japanese or Chinese. At the immigration detention centre, where they're taken, queues of hundreds of illegal immigrants form outside every single day. It's like a scene from the United Nations. People of every race, colour and nationality. These are the workers immigration officials failed to find. When they'd made their money, or are too homesick to stay, they present themselves to authorities to be willingly deported. They face no penalty. Japan is simply thankful to see them go. Many will be back. Immigration officials see the same faces time and time again in the endless round of raids. There is simply too much money to be made in Japan, too many dirty jobs the Japanese don't want to do, and too few immigration officers to catch them. So long at their continues to be a market in Japan for cheap unskilled labour, then the smuggling of illegal immigrants will go on.
B1 immigration illegal chinese japanese smuggling labour Japan's battle with rising tide of illegal Chinese immigrants 116 16 阿多賓 posted on 2013/12/18 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary