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Okinawa boy injured after window falls off US Marine chopper

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Okinawa boy injured after window falls off US Marine chopper

The Associated Press
Okinawa Gov. Takeshi Onaga, holds a picture of a metal window frame fallen from U.S. military aircraft CH-53 outside an elementary school in Ginowan, Okinawa Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2017. Japanese officials say a boy was injured in Okinawa when the metal window frame fell from a U.S. military helicopter, escalating anti-American sentiments on the southern island. (Kazuki Sawada/Kyodo News via AP)

    Japanese officials said a boy was injured in Okinawa on Wednesday when a metal window frame fell from a U.S. military helicopter, the second such incident in the past week on the southern island.

    Officials from the city of Ginowan said the window fell from a CH-53 transport helicopter and landed on a school playground, leaving a boy with minor arm injuries. About 50 children were outside the school, which is next to the Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, at the time.

    The Marines said the window was an emergency exit on the aircraft.

    Last week, a part of another U.S. military helicopter fell on a nearby kindergarten roof, but no one was injured.

    "It's outrageous this happened again," Okinawa Gov. Takeshi Onaga told reporters angrily. "Despite repeated accidents, U.S. military officials would not lend their ears to our concerns."

    Brig. Gen. Paul Rock, who oversees Marine Corps installations in the Pacific region, said later Wednesday that all CH-53 helicopters at the Futenma base have been grounded for safety checks when he visited the prefectural government to offer an apology over the incident.

    The base in a crowded residential area in central Okinawa is a source of anti-U.S. military sentiment and safety concerns. Its planned relocation, pushed by the Japanese and U.S. governments, has been delayed for more than 20 years because many residents want it entirely off of Okinawa.

    The latest incidents are likely to further fuel opposition to the U.S. military presence on Okinawa, where about half of the 50,000 American troops in Japan are stationed and where local residents have expressed concerns about military crime and safety.

    Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga urged the U.S. military to be more attentive to safety and make more efforts to minimize its impact on the local community.

    A Marine Corps CH-53 helicopter made an emergency landing on a farm and burned in October. Another helicopter belonging to the Futenma base crashed into a nearby university in 2004, injuring three U.S. crewmembers.

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    Follow Mari Yamaguchi on Twitter at twitter.com/mariyamaguchi

    Find her work at https://www.apnews.com/search/mari%20yamaguchi

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