While the ruling party proposed a vote on the amendment to the Immigration Control Act to review the way foreigners are detained at the Legal Affairs Committee of the House of Councillors on January 1, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, which opposed the amendment, said that it could not respond, and submitted a resolution to dismiss the chairman of the Legal Affairs Committee in order to block the vote.

The proposed amendment to the Immigration Control Act, etc., ▼ Regarding the provision that deportation is suspended while applying for refugee, there are cases where people try to avoid deportation by repeating the application, and after the third application, it does not apply unless "reasonable reason" is shown,

The principle that the person is to be detained in a facility until he moves out is amended to be "supervisor" approved by the Immigration Bureau. It includes being able to live under supporters called.

After passing the House of Representatives, the revised bill was being deliberated by the Legal Affairs Committee of the House of Councillors, and the ruling parties proposed that the committee vote on the 3st, saying that the deliberations had taken sufficient time at the morning and afternoon board meetings.

In response, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan and others, which oppose the amendment and insist that the transparency of refugee recognition should be increased, insisted that they could not respond, but Komeito's chairman of the Legal Affairs Committee, Sugi, indicated that he would vote ex officio.

The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) submitted a resolution to dismiss Chairman Sugi in order to prevent today's vote, saying that the Immigration Bureau is using arbitrary operations, such as some examiners conducting an extremely large number of examinations regarding refugee status, and that deliberations have not been exhausted.

The ruling parties rejected the resolution to dismiss him at the plenary session of the House of Councillors on June 1 and hope to pass and enact the revised bill as early as next week, but the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan is poised to demand further deliberations, and the battle is fierce.