Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan, abbreviated as SMJ, is a non-partisanadvocacy organization and umbrella of migrant interest and support organizations founded 1997 in Japan. Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan was founded in 1997 by 66 migrant support groups and 72 individuals, who started to meet on a regular basis at the “nationwide forum for solidarity with migrant workers” in 1996. Since June 2015 SMJ is legally incorporated as Non-Profit Organization under the Japanese NPO-law. Among the SMJ’s members are organizations as well as individuals. The SMJ’s office is located in Bunkyō ward, Tokyo. The largest part of its revenue comes from membership fees and subscriptions.
SMJ publishes the monthly Japanese language magazine Migrants Network. One issue costs 500 Yen and can be purchased via subscription. The SMJ has also edited several non-fiction books on different migration issues. Most of them have been published by Akashi Shoten, a publisher in Tokyo specializing in education, social and minority issues in Japan.
The SMJ has no formal ties to political parties in Japan. In July 2008, the former Democratic Party of Japan, which was in power from August 2009 to December 2012, published a report on foreign workers policies. Besides other institutions and interest groups, the DPJ’s committee also invited SMJ representatives as external advisors during the drafting process. Since its establishment in 1997, SMJ and its partner organizations regularly met with bureaucrats from several ministries at least twice a year in March and November, and SMJ members have appeared as external councilors in parliamentary commissions of the National Diet in 2003, 2004 and twice in 2009.
SMJ regularly serves as information sources for journalists reporting on migration issues in Japan. Ippei Torii, the secretary general of SMJ, appeared in the 2009 documentary movie "Sour Strawberries – Japan’s Hidden Guest Workers". On 17 September 2019 the Japanese public broadcaster NHK aired a 40 minutes feature on Torii.
International recognition
When in 2010 the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, Jorge Bustamante, visited Japan he also met with SMJ. As a result, Bustamante’s report widely adopted SMJ’s view on the Technical Intern Training Program stating that "situations amount to slavery or trafficking," and that since there was
"no effective system in place to monitor the situation of trainees and technical interns and offer them protection and referral mechanisms, they remained particularly vulnerable and became victims of serious abuses".
"a forceful leader in anti-trafficking efforts as the secretary general for Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan, which has provided shelter and assistance to more than 4,000 foreign workers in Japan who have escaped from exploitative conditions or sought help recovering unpaid wages. Mr. Torii meets regularly with various ministries that are responsible for oversight of the program, and he has provided guidance to the UNSpecial Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants. His persistence has kept this issue squarely before the press and on the political agenda in Japan".