1. The word Yakuza originated from Yakuza 1. The word Yakuza originated from Yakuza will remind many people of criminals who have tattoos all over their bodies and amputated fingers on their permed heads. There are two etymological origins of the word Yakuza. One is that the word Yakuza originated from a popular card game called Oicho Kabu, a Japanese blackjack. This game is a game where 19 people (blackjack 21) win the sum of card numbers, and numbers above 19 are useless. 8-9-3 (Yakuza) was used to describe useless people because the sum of the numbers was 20. Another is that it originated from Carta among gambling similar to hwatu. Play several games with cards with numbers from 1 to 10. Among them, Sammai Carta draws three cards and hits the highest when the sum reaches 9, but if it holds three wrong cards, it becomes the worst case. Eight, nine, and three are Japanese pronunciations that begin with Ya, Ku, and Sa, respectively, making them "Yakuza." It meant it was useless anywhere. The general public used the word Iyakuza as a slang for gangsters, but now it has become a common noun. Yakuza was first used in the early 17th century to call people known as 'Kabuki Mono' or ' These people had a bad reputation, such as strange clothes, strange hair shapes, and bad behavior. During the Shogun era, these people were also called "Ronin," but they flocked all over Japan on small streets and plundered small villages and cities. The source of Yakuza dates back to the Edo period, and those who formed a group for the purpose of sending manpower, construction, and unloading showed off their residence under the name of the family of mafias at that time. As it came down to later generations, it was changed to something Gumi or something Guy. Yakuza has a strict class structure from the boss-level Oyabung to the general subordinate-level, and has "Samurai-style rules," making it almost impossible for investigative officials to penetrate the inside. Their consciousness or event of following samurai rules values formality. Even during the inauguration ceremony of the boss or the divisional event held when expanding the organization, there is an order such as setting up an altar and awarding a certificate of approval. The Yakuza in Japan has a pyramid-style organization that combines with other violent organizations to form a larger group and again combines with other large groups to form a larger nationwide organization. Yakuza in Japan is roughly divided into seven major gangs. Among them, Yamaguchi-gumi, Inagawa Kai, and Sumiyoshigai are the three major regional organizations, and their members alone account for 48% of all gangsters in Japan. Yamaguchipa tripled its number of members after Watanabe became the head 12 years ago, reaching 16,500 in 1999. The former Yakuza earned income mainly by opening gambling boards. Then, gradually, in the name of protecting restaurants and entertainment establishments, they expanded their scope by receiving money from them and participating in the management of the establishment. It also arranges or intervenes in promising projects against the backdrop of the enormous wealth and violence collected in this way. Recently, there has also been a movement to advance overseas through illegal or legal businesses such as drug trading and loan-to-value businesses. Korean gangsters also imitate the Yakuza organization in Japan. 2. Yamaguchi-gumi Japan's largest Yakuza organization, Yamaguchi-jo, is the world's largest organization far exceeding the U.S. mafia in size, even when the number of its members is high. It is no exaggeration to say that to know all of Yakuza, Japan, you need to know the stem of Yamaguchi tissue. Yamaguchijo, first organized in Kobe in the 1910s, conquered the Kansai region, including Osaka, and drove its momentum to extend its power like octopus feet to Kyushu, Shigoku, and Hokkaido. Recently, it has also established a base in the Kanto region centered on Tokyo. Those who have been seeking to enter Tokyo for several years already have about 100 offices in Tokyo. Naturally, friction with existing forces has arisen, and the impact continues even now. For Yakuza, occupying Tokyo was a task with the pride of dominating the country, in addition to acquiring a huge entertainment district. The Yamaguchi organization has already become the largest and largest organization in Japan. In fact, the history of the Yamaguchi organization is the history of protests and confrontations, including murder that took place in a power struggle with other organizations and retaliatory murder. Although the Yamaguchi organization originated from the name of Oyabung in the early days of Yamaguchi Noboru, it was only a small gangster organization in Kobe at the time. However, the situation changes rapidly after a person named Katsuo Daoka, who made the Yamaguchi organization into the rising sun, joined. After Daoka became the head of the third generation, common characteristics have emerged in the Yamaguchi organization's method of expanding its power. When entering a single city, it conflicts with the existing Yakuza organization, and on the surface, a Yamaguchi member is attacked or killed first. The Yamaguchi organization's headquarters strike force mobilizes a large number of members as if waiting for this time to come, destroying local organizations in a surprise move. Japanese media describe this as a uprising between Yakudas. "Washing blood with fatigue," that is, taking revenge on the blood they shed with the other person's blood, which is Yakuza's uprising. During the 1962 Kyushu Uprising, 300 batting teams armed with gun knives were dispatched to fight the Yakuza War with hundreds of opposing members at risk of their lives. In 1990, when the Yamaguchi organization began to enter the hands of the northeastern region, friction arose with the existing local organization, the Kyondosekiguchi Association. First, a member of the Yamaguchi organization was found dead, and more than 800 Yakus from all over the country flocked to his funeral, and two days later, men in black suits flocked to the small and medium-sized city of Akida to show off their prestige. It goes without saying that the background of these protests is the intention to take control of the hegemony surrounding the seizure of interests related to the local economy. "Yamaguchi-gumi's entry into the Seoul metropolitan area." The Yamaguchi organization gently opened a contact office at Yokohama Port to prevent rival organizations from noticing to enter the Seoul metropolitan area. However, Yamaguchi decided to find another way for now after a backlash from the Inagawa organization, which was dominating Tokyo's dark world. Daoka, who had already cut off the fingers of middle executives and risked reconciliation due to the Yokohama clash with the Inagawa organization, attempted to advance through an open event. In April 1963, he gathered local leaders such as right-wing figures, chairman of the Drug Council, and lawmakers to hold a competition in Yokohama to form the "National Purification Alliance for Drug Deprivation." And he appointed an executive in the Yamaguchi organization as the branch manager of the alliance. The alliance was externally an organization related to drug deportation, but the Yokohama office, which actually serves as a sub-organization of the Yamaguchi organization, was opened. The Inagawa organization, which was fired up by such a bypass move to advance, gathered all Yakuza organizations from the Seoul metropolitan area to form and fight the "Kwandonghoe," an alliance of organizations. It was a tense time just before the bloody Yakuza War exploded. However, the times began to ride a wave of great change. From the beginning of 1964, a massive Yakuza cleanup operation by the Japanese police began. A year later, the Kwandong Association, which could not withstand the intensive crackdown by the police, was disbanded first, and each organization began to collapse one after another. The Yakuza hid underwater or temporarily suspended their activities and hid like hibernating snakes. Even the Yamaguchi organization was in the same position as some suggested that it should be dissolved internally, and the Inagawa organization was in the same position. Naturally, they began to recognize that it was not the time to argue between the Yakuza organizations. The leader of the Inagawa organization was arrested on charges of opening an illegal gambling house and sentenced to three years in prison, and the Yamaguchi organization also went through thorough restructuring and attempted internal changes. Following these changes, the two major organizations naturally agreed to cooperate with each other. In 1972, the two organizations signed a brotherly agreement and decided to cooperate. At that time, the media criticized the meeting as a "black weakness of the underground empire." As a result, the Yamaguchi organization succeeded in entering the Seoul metropolitan area, and the police's intensive crackdown united the two major organizations that had been in a feud. Rather, holding hands together, they became a common enemy of the police. As a result, the Yamaguchi organization of 12,000 members of 460 organizations and the Inagawa organization of 5,300 members of 65 organizations joined hands. Since then, the mood of reconciliation between these two major Yakuza organizations, such as giant dinosaurs, has continued so far. -Dongseonghoe -The leader of the Yamaguchi organization, which secured a vast sphere of influence in Osaka, attempted to enter the Seoul metropolitan area in earnest around 1965. He could have tried to enter Tokyo by driving the momentum of submission of small organizations from all over the country, but Daoka knew that battle was not the only thing he could do. Behind the rapid expansion of the organization, in addition to the method of suppressing force, a merger method was attempted one after another to accept local minor organizations trying to become members of the Yamaguchi organization as a brother's alliance. The organization approached in this way to enter the Seoul metropolitan area is Korean-Japanese Jeong Geon-young.It was Dongseonghoe, led by Japanese name.町久)). The Dongsung Association also actively welcomed the Yamaguchi organization's approach. The reason was because of their unfavorable position in the Yakuja society in the metropolitan area at the time. The Dongsung Association gathered Koreans from Japan who were underprivileged as the parent of the Jeong Gun-young family, which was a wandering organization shortly after World War II, to expand their power and build an organization in Ginza, Tokyo. In the Yakuza society in Tokyo, the area of Nawabari (power zone) was emphasized. No matter how many members and combative organizations they have, they have not been recognized as the Yakuza organization unless they inherit or are under the control of families with areas that have been handed down from the past. In the end, the same-sex association was alienated from other organizations as it was pointed out as "emerging organizations with strong organizational power but not traditional genealogy" or "wandering people without clear areas."
Among the reasons were the national sentiment of discrimination against Koreans. The Dongsung Association is still treated as a heresy in Tokyo's Yakuza society, but its power has expanded dramatically. Jung Geon-young had a deep friendship in that he was a compatriot like Yeokdosan, a hero in Japan's post-war professional wrestling box office. Yamaguchi's Daoka boss, who dominated the local box office, will establish a relationship with Jung Gun-young through professional wrestling box office work. It was a very natural step for Jung Gun-young, who was suffering from grief in the metropolitan area, to join hands with the Yamaguchi organization, which advanced to target the Yakuza organizations in Tokyo. The Yamaguchi organization also did not want to admit the traditional areas of Tokyo. They thought that the sphere of influence was stealing by force. It was the Yamaguchi organization that has practiced it in other provinces so far. In February 1963, Yamaguchi and Dongsunghoe formed a brotherly relationship. After that, Yakus with a badge with two letters of Dongseong in its chest in a diamond-shaped design symbolizing Yamaguchi began to walk on the streets of Tokyo. Behind the merger of the two organizations was a conspiracy by a man named Yoshio Kodama, the top right-wing leader of Japan at the time, to use Yakuza for right-wing activities. In 1964, the Japanese police began a full-fledged Yakuza crackdown operation in Yanagawa Organization. This time, the police, who decided to destroy the Yakuza firmly, disbanded the organizations from all over the country one after another. However, only the Yamaguchi organization maintained its power. Therefore, in 1966, the police began to crack down on the Yamaguchi organization. The Osaka National Police Agency established a "special crackdown headquarters" and arrested its members. Kang Dong-hwa, a friend of Yakuza Yang Won-seok, a Korean-Japanese, was embroiled in a trial on charges of blackmail after being established as a leader for the second generation, but his sentence was confirmed after the appeal was also dismissed in 1967. Kang Dong-hwa appeared at the Osaka detention center in a red sports car and was imprisoned after telling the members who saw him off, "Don't surrender to the Japanese police." The police's destruction operation against a bossless organization continued without forgiveness, and the withdrawal was imposed through a crackdown. The situation was also known to Yang Won-seok, who was in prison, and he decided to disband the organization. However, Kang Dong-hwa opposed the dissolution. He said, "Now we are in the hands of Daoka Oyabung. We cannot abandon the flag of the Yamaguchi organization at will, he said. Yang Won-seok, who was imprisoned in Nagoya Prison, met Kang Dong-hwa, who was in Osaka Prison, and persuaded him. Kang Dong-hwa, who was notorious and energetic at this time, also said, "It is an organization created by the chairman (Yang Won-seok), so do as the chairman wants..."He replied with a lonely look. It is said that some kind of plan implemented by the police authorities was lurking behind the agreement to disband the organization by having the two people who were imprisoned in different prisons specially. Despite the police's massive crackdown, the Yamaguchi organization's main house remained intact. So, at least the Yanagawa organization, an affiliated organization, was disbanded, and through the first Yakuza crackdown, the police tried to conclude that they had achieved results. In the end, he became a victim to protect the Yamaguchi organization's home. The dissolution agreement and statement written in prison were written in the same handwriting as the sentences and the signatures of the two. Therefore, the article was prepared in advance by the police, and it is said that the two had no choice but to stamp their hands. The two spent the rest of their lives doing various businesses after dissolving the organization. Kang Dong-hwa died in 1987 and Yang Won-seok died in 1991. There were also many speculations that the Japanese police might have threatened the two, who were Korean nationals at the time of dissolution of the organization, by suggesting forced repatriation. Immediately, the two were also insulated from the Yamaguchi organization's home. The reason was that "the organization was disbanded without permission from my parents." In this way, the name of the organization, which was called the "Army of Death" led by compatriots in Japan and cooled the talks of Yakuza across Japan, disappeared from the Yakuza world. The Yamaguchi organization, which achieved its entry into the Seoul metropolitan area in the Osaka War, has now grown into a giant organization that exerts influence almost all over Japan. However, in 1975, a small Yakuza organization, which was parasitic in Osaka, the home of the Yamaguchi organization, ran against Yamaguchi. It refers to a bloody slaughter war between Yakudas known as the so-called Matsuda Gumi Uprising. This incident triggered three famous Osaka wars that continued over the next three years and four months. In response to the uprising, media at the time viewed Yamaguchi tissue as an elephant and compared the Matsuda tissue to a mosquito that was less than a fistful. Yamaguchi had 11,000 members in about 500 affiliated organizations, but Matsuda was weak with 350 members from about 20 organizations. Although it was compared to a fight between elephants and mosquitoes, Matsuda members took the attitude of determination of death, saying, "The battle is not necessarily known by the number of soldiers alone." The incident took place one night in July 1975 at a club called Jutem in Osaka pub. Four Yakuza in Yamaguchi, who were drinking late, were intensively shot by five unidentified people, and three were immediately killed on the spot and one seriously injured. The criminals were five hit men (murder commandos) dispatched from the Matsuda organization. Matsuda, an emerging Yakuza organization with a short history, had its main source of income being illegal gambling house operations. It has opened more than 30 gambling houses in downtown Osaka alone and has already begun to rise with high praise within the industry as its income from them is rising more than 10 million yen a day. The tiger couldn't just pass by when he saw a fox having a feast after catching a delicious prey. Action members of the Sasaki organization dispatched from Yamaguchi stormed into a thriving business site and made a fuss on gambling grounds. Yamaguchi and Matsuda reached a compromise with each other, but strong Yamaguchi could not respond to this, and Matsuda, destined to launch a project to lay golden eggs, decided to protest and beat the players. Four members were sacrificed, but Yamaguchi did not immediately retaliate. Organizational executives decided to move only to the Sasaki organization, an affiliated organization that was directly damaged, because the entire Matsuda side, which is engaged in retaliatory attacks, was too small. Sensing this fact, Matsuda rather fired a gun at Yamaguchi's central headquarters office in Kobe. Judging that he had been attacked by the royal palace, the angry Yamaguchi members organized a group to kill the leader of Matsuda and entered his home. They began to attack by firing bullets over police vehicles on patrol. The fight between elephants and mosquitoes began. As the desperate retaliation by Yamaguchi members continued, police authorities intensively arrested the members who committed the crime and tried to reconcile the two organizations. The Matsuda organization, which was devastated by Yamaguchi's intensive attack, also secretly expected the police to intervene and reconcile. However, among the Yamaguchi members, there was a prevailing atmosphere that "there was no need to compromise with the opponent who would collapse on his own." Meanwhile, Yamamoto, Yamaguchi's voodoo, ignored the Matsuda organization and declared a "termination of the uprising." He volunteered to hold a press conference and called in reporters to say nothing about the Matsuda organization, saying, "I apologize for causing confusion in society through the organizational uprising." Yakuza's unusual move to declare the end of the uprising in the form of a press conference was Yamaguchi's show of power that he could not be on par with the Matsuda organization, which challenged them head-on. The pier, Yamamoto, succeeded in restoring the prestige of the Yamaguchi organization, which fell to the ground in the wake of the boss's shooting. Yamaguchi's strong image, which has become slim since he took the lead in conquering the country over the past years, has been planted externally again. He, who was on sick bail due to his chronic disease, Gan Gyeong-hwa, was imprisoned again after his bail was canceled on charges of leading the protests. After a while, he could not endure his difficult imprisonment, worsened his illness, and became an invincible guest. After the death of leader Daoka due to heart disease, the Yamaguchi organization loses its centrality and falls into extreme confusion when even the pier leader Yamamoto, who has strong leadership, dies in prison. The members follow each conflicting leader, and Japan's largest Yakuza organization is divided into two. Therefore, the nature of gangsters against force appears in power, and the worst Yakuza war in history breaks out to kill and kill hegemony. Signs of such division were already sprouting among dock-level executives during the uprising with the Matsuda organization. The multiple bullets shot by Yakuza, a Matsuda organization called Narumi Kiyoshi, did not take the life of leader Daoka, but over time, it became an opportunity to divide the Yamaguchi organization and left traces of resentment that drove its existence into crisis. Narumi embraced the remains of the leader and vowed revenge when the leader of the Japanese Justice Corps, who he was loyal to, was killed by a Yamaguchi member, and then shot the leader Daoka, but failed and died brutally. Then, what happened to the Matsuda organization, which challenged Yamaguchi and sacrificed many members? In May 1983, the following "declaration of dissolution of organization" was mailed to the head of the Osaka National Police Agency under the name of the Matsuda organization leader. "We have decided to disband after realizing that the practice of Im Hyeop-do has been a proposition on the ground, but it is extremely difficult to maintain it due to changes in the social situation." In the future, each of us is a cultured society..." But in general, members of organizations dissolved in the Yakuza society in Japan are usually absorbed into other Yakuza organizations and rarely get out of the way. <Kyushu Yakuza War> Japan's Kyushu region is the region where exchanges between Korea and Japan are most frequent in the past and now. Since the Japanese colonial era, Busan and Kyushu have been in and out of regular contact lines, and it is still a base for exchanges between Korea and Japan. However, Yakuza in Kyushu is known to be the cruelest and most violent temperament in Japan.
When they started fighting with other organizations, they fought a retaliatory battle to wash blood with blood, so Yamaguchi, Japan's largest organization, could not easily step into their area. Yamaguchi organization was gradually expanding its scope to Kyushu region by taking an indirect form of partnership with local small organizations with regional ties. One day in December 1986, a desperate war broke out between the Yamaguchi-affiliated Izu organization and the local native organization Dojinkai. In the evening that day, an intermediate executive of Dojinkai named Gojiki was attacked by four gunmen in front of his bar. Gozoki collapsed on the street and died. Gozoki, who died on the same day, fired a few months ago at the Yamaguchi-based Inaba party to withdraw his members. At this time, there was a seriously injured and abandoned man, and his son avenged Gojoki by stabbing him with a knife. At dawn in winter, Dojinkai executives, to which Gojoki belonged, wailed in front of the dead body and sharpened their swords of anger. It was a vicious cycle of revenge. The famous Kyushu Yakuza War began like this. Dojinkai's retaliatory operation has begun. Kyushu Yakuza does not try to hide the crime from the beginning. He comes straight in and kills the other person. These tactics of those who are rough and simple in temperament are a characteristic that Yaku people in other regions fear. Dojinkai's retaliation was also carried out in a typical Kyushu method. Two hit men from Dojin Kai appeared with kitchen knives and pistols at the house of Yoshii, the middle leader of the Yamaguchi Inaba organization. Yoshi was robbed while his family screamed. When Yoshii collapsed forward, Hitman shot two pistols behind his back and disappeared. As a result, the Izu organization, a direct line of the Yamaguchi organization that is building power in downtown Fukuoka, began to move, and the war spread. Isu was the vanguard of the Yamaguchi organization seeking national championship. Dojinkai was famous for being the most courageous organization in Kyushu, but the number of members was 1,500, less than a tenth of Yamaguchi. At that time, Yamaguchi headquarters had no time to look back on Kyushu as confusion continued, with the four leaders killed and the organization divided into two. That's why Iz organization took measures to cope. The struggle between the Yamaguchi family to expand its scope to the Kyushu region and the strongest Dojingai organization at the time of resistance continued for about three months before heads of local Yakuza organizations gathered in March 1987 to hold a sense of reconciliation. However, it is possible to guess how desperate the war was, with 9 deaths and 16 seriously injured in such a short period of time. As the war between the two major Yakuza organizations of Yamaguchi and Ichiwakai continued for a long time, Yakuza's fight began to show signs of economic war, including military funds needed for the battle and regular income to maintain the organization. Ichikakai, which has been inferior due to the continued departure of its members, has also greatly increased the burden of bonuses paid to the organization per Yakuza to maintain the organization. The vicious cycle of members who failed to withstand these bonuses leaving the organization continued. At this time, a decisive event occurred. On May 14, 1988, Yamaguchi members fired rocket bombs at the Yamamoto Hiroshima Head's mansion in Ichiwakai organization. Three police officers dispatched around the boss' house were also injured. In fact, it is an unwritten rule that Yakuza do not do unnecessary acts of attacking police or innocent citizens. This is because the damage to return to the organization by the police or public opinion after the attack is greater than the benefit of attacking them. However, some analysts say that Yamaguchi members had antipathy to the incident of attacking a police officer at the time because the police were helping the Ichikai organization. The police came up with a scenario in which the organization was divided into two as a preparatory step to break down the powerful Yamaguchi organization and weakened the power. In addition, the police were blocking Yamaguchi's attack by protecting Ichikakai's boss mansion, which was on the defensive. The upper level of the Yamaguchi organization had a policy to disband the Ichikakai organization and retire from the Yakuza community instead of protecting Ichikakai's boss Yamamoto's life. However, hard-liners within the organization, especially members of the assassinated fourth leader Takenaga, insisted on fighting to the end. They had planned to fire a rocket bomb secretly at the head mansion of the Ichikai organization, confuse the surroundings with the impact of the explosion, and put an assassination commando with a machine gun into the mansion to kill the leader. However, the fired rocket bounced off the bulletproof membrane surrounding the entire building. When this happened, Yamaguchi members shot three police officers who were guarding the area, injuring them, and trying to pick up rocket bullets that fell under the wall and throw them into the mansion. At that moment, a rocket bomb exploded, and three members of the team ran away with injuries all over their bodies. The incident ended in failure, but it showed Yamaguchi's persistent aggression and accelerated the agitation and division of the Ichiwakai organization. Rumors have also begun to circulate that there are only about 20 henchmen around the leader. Around this time, the head of Inagawa-kai organization, the largest Yakuza organization in Tokyo, stepped up and began arbitration in earnest. On March 30, 1989, Yamamoto, head of Ichikakai, visited the Yamaguchi organization's home in person and apologized. As a result, the history of the Ichiwakai organization came to an end and the organization was disbanded. At this time, the person who served as the arbitrator of the Yamaguchi organization came.It was the pier of Yamaguchi called Yoshinori Nabe. Having had deep ties with famous Yakuza leaders across Japan, he has since risen to the top position as the fifth Gumicho of the Yamaguchi organization and still holds the position. About a character called "Daoka Kazuo"...> Shanshomura, Japan, March 28, 1912, July 30, 1981, Amagasaki. The head of major criminal organizations in Japan (Oyabun). Nickname is sweet potato. Katsuo Daoka, who had 100,000 members across Japan and served as the best Yakuza boss, showed excellent business skills unlike other heads of organizations. He established a firm financial foundation by expanding his business to construction, transportation, port unloading, and financial systems, breaking away from nominal protection costs and gambling projects that Yakuja usually earn from making money. Since then, it has expanded its scope to the box office business and has dominated the entertainment industry by running productions such as sumo, professional wrestling, and horse racing. It lists leadership, adaptation, organizational power, human relations, financial power, combatability, grit, and foreboding as conditions that must be equipped to become the top leader of a giant Yakuza organization. In addition to these conditions, a boss with experience of living a bottom life amid the sorrow of discrimination and poverty will build a stronger organization in Yakuza society. It may be because I have been experiencing the ugliness of social contradictions since I was young and know the bitter and sweet taste well. Chief Katsuo Daoka was one of them. Born in 1923 to a poor farmhouse, he graduated from elementary school under various conditions at his relative's house when his parents passed away at the age of seven. After that, while working as a shelfman at a shipyard, he got along with a group of bad boys and ran out of his job after a defeat with company employees. The 17-year-old Daoka caught the eyes of the second Oyabung Yamaguchi Noboru of the Yamaguchi organization, which was then a small organization, and became a member when he successfully served as a troubleshooter for the crew labor dispute. Seven years later, one winter day, he brutally murdered an action member of a rival Yakuza organization who raided the Yamaguchi organization office with a knife and spent seven years in a cell. After being released from prison, this case received a high reputation within the organization, and due to its influence, it was appointed as the third leader by executives in 1946. At that time, Daoka was young in his early 30s. As a boss, Daoka gathered middle executives in one place and delivered several policies for the development of the organization. 1. Reform the existing Yakuza property growth method and start a new business. 2. In the event of a fight or problem with one member of the union, the entire organization shall not move and defend itself with the spirit of one person and one person. 3. Handling of drugs is prohibited. When caught, expulsion and hard-line measures shall be taken. 4. Cooperate fully with the police to be loved at all times loved. After the above instructions, immediate middle executives are called presidents and set up border companies. On the surface, the organization, which wore a corporate mask and started various foreign rights businesses, also stands on its hair like a hungry flock once competitive organizations touch its food due to potential violence. Daoka's brutal strategic tactics shone in the wake of bloody protests between organizations, and his position became more firm. ...The role of the top leader of organizations ... The leader of Yamaguchi, who emerged as the strongest Yakuza group in Kansai, including Osaka and Kobe, Japan, began to get busy day by day. The end of the bloated organization was not reached because it was busy socializing with political and business figures, managing entertainment success organizations including port officials, and meeting with big right-wingers. As it was a violent group, strong control was needed to lead the organization. So, what was established in 1963 was a voting body called the Yamaguchi Organization's Supreme Executive Council. A pier-level figure composed of seven people and four assistants under it were appointed. They each shared tasks such as overseeing business groups or directing each organization, and took the role of the top command tower. The leader Daoka, who reigned on it, played a role as the actual CEO with absolute authority. Daoka's idea of separating the Yakuza organization internally into a group of businessmen and a group of struggle behavior was timely. The struggle action group guaranteed the safety of the business group, and the business group guaranteed the operating funds of the struggle action group. This method prevented the outbreak of protests between organizations from sparking businessmen outside such areas, and the struggle action group was able to engage in war with confidence.
It was also during this period that the Yamaguchi organization was called the Armed Forces Merchants Unit. Taking advantage of the time when the police's perception of organizational violence was not firm, the Yamaguchi organization continued to expand rapidly in both business groups and behavioral struggle groups. If such expansion of power continued as it was, the Iyakuza organization would have dominated three areas: entertainment box office, ports, and construction, and established a strong foundation for the central political and business community. However, almost all major projects were lost due to the police's thorough destruction operation, which began in 1966. Still, at this time, most of the immediate docks maintained their power because they managed their own businesses in any form. They were working on businesses tailored to their individuality, including taxi companies, real estate, ranches, ice making, and hotel management. Among the reasons for maintaining the organization's reputation were the will of Daoka, who thoroughly banned the trade of drug stimulants. Daoka strictly banned it. However, at the end, there were many people who touched drugs. If he was found trading drugs and stimulants, he was expelled from the organization without forgiveness. The organization created a scandal with "no exchanges such as communication and counseling with them" and a picture of the face of the person who was excommunicated and sent it to the Yakuza organization offices nationwide to prevent them from sticking to Yakuza society forever. So they became general meeting members or joined right-wing organizations. Activists from Yakuza began to be established in extreme right-wing organizations. Director Itami Yamaguchi's organization's Daoka boss changed his teenage singer to a singer show in his 20s after performing all kinds of tricks out of spite when a singer from his production was eliminated from the live performance of a teenage singer show at the end of the year. Daoka's name is Broadcasting because of this incident, which broke the pride of the Japan Private Broadcasting Federation. He was known as a celebrity in the entertainment industry and got a chance to connect with big names in the entertainment and box office. The office of a Kobe entertainer with the most popular singers of the time was set up inside the Yamaguchi Organization Headquarters building in downtown Kobe and continued to target Tokyo in earnest. As one Yakuza organization dominated the Japanese entertainment industry, other small organizations in the provinces began to imitate it. If there was a box office business within their area with the entertainment box office in the organization, a certain amount of seat tax would be removed from the organizers. If they refused to do so, the crazy men went into the hall and ruined the event. At least once or twice a year, events hosted by the Yakuza organization were held. For example, it was an absurd success without much to watch, such as "a memorial performance for the 7th anniversary of the predecessor's Oyabung. They sold 50 or 100 tickets to entertainment establishments, restaurants, construction companies, and local maintenance in a bundle. In other words, it was a box office hit without any loss. He continued to engage in a kind of coercion on the back of violence. Meanwhile, the story related to the Japanese entertainment industry and the Yakuza organization is famous for the case of movie director Itami Joo, who produced critical films about organizational violence, drew public consensus, and fought against Yakuza lonely. In the spring of 1992, Itami was stabbed in the face, ears, and neck by razor wielded by unidentified gunmen lurking in the parking lot in front of his home. Amid a torn scream, the tall, solid-shouldered men calmly attacked him without a word and disappeared. At that time, Itami was enjoying the most popularity. He was also very socially critical, so he was challenging the serious Yakuza problem head-on. The movie "The Woman of Civil Violence," short for "civil intervention violence," means that hotels fight back Yakuza, centered on female lawyers specializing in violence, and the Yamaguchi organization was involved in the content. Director Itami's attack incident was reported as it was, angering the Japanese people. As expected, they were Yakuza from Yamaguchi. Amid criticism from the media and the public, the film made a huge box office hit. It earned about 1.5 billion yen through the video market. After that, he insisted that Yakuza violence should be eradicated every time he appeared on the show. He grabbed money and honor at once with courageous determination. That's why the Japanese call Itami a true samurai in the film industry. Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's largest gang, is seeking so-called "new economicization" as police crackdowns intensify and traditional sources of income have decreased over the past decade due to the long-term recession in the Japanese economy. According to Hong Kong's weekly Paiston Economic Review (FEER) on the 23rd, Japanese police believe Yamaguchi leader Yoshinori Watanabe invested some of the organization's assets in the high-tech industry in the so-called "bubble economy" era in the 1980s. Yamaguchipa expects the business of investing in the new economy to be a lucrative business that compensates for stock losses. The expansion of Yamaguchi's investment is causing serious problems apart from the traditional sex and drug crime business, and even high-ranking government officials have illegal political ties, FEER pointed out. An anonymous Yakuza member in Tokyo said, "Yakuza is a monument," adding, "We like to eat full and like the sweetest and fattest parts." "That's the high-tech business right now," he said. However, FEER pointed out that there are no signs of violence's involvement in the field yet. Miyawaki Raisuke, former head of the Japan National Police Agency's violent crime team and currently working as an advisor to companies' Yakuza, said his ties with Japanese companies are too broad to determine when and where they are formed. "What Japan needs to do to overcome the long-term economic recession is to drive out gangsters from companies tarnished by its collusion with Yakuza and start anew," he advised. 3. Japan's security, which once was a hero, was unstable during the years of confusion after the end of Yakuza II. During this period, Yakuza was once heroized by Japanese citizens by being called the Man of Men or the Foot of Yamato Spirit. It is said that it protected the citizens of Japan, the defeated country, on behalf of the police against third countries that were engaged in violence. A book titled The Destruction of the Yamaguchi Organization, published in 1968 by the Japanese police for internal data, states that Koreans and Taiwanese in Japan at the time are referred to as third countries and that security is being violated by them. In Japanese society, which was suffering from a severe shortage of supplies after the war, many black markets sprang up, and the commercial district was dominated by Koreans in Japan. It is known that they were secretly afraid of the Japanese people of the defeated country, and some of them were of poor quality, such as playing stolen water on the black market. Those who were placed between the Japanese and the occupied U.S. military were called third countries and were despised, and these Koreans and Koreans could not find a job otherwise, so they had to take an unjust way to make ends meet. The so-called third countries were forming a sphere of influence with a sense of solidarity in that they were the same people, while working in the black market, junk, pig farming, gambling, and membrane labor. At a time when there was a lack of police force, the Japanese were afraid of a third country. They were also afraid that they would pay back for their persecution before the war. At this time, Yakuza was the one who thankfully protected them and prevented the retaliation of third countries instead of the Japanese police. Even now, when the police crackdown intensifies, the Yakuza organization argues for past achievements, saying, "Did our organization forget the grace of risking its lives and keeping order during the post-war chaos period?" After that, due to the resistance of Yakuza, which has reached the point of receiving public support, third countries will change their wealth accumulated in the black market to another industry called Pachinko Business. At that time, when there was no entertainment, Pachinko expanded nationwide, and Yakuza again stuck to the project like a malignant fungus and used it as their huge source of funds and became the driving force behind the organization's expansion. In this way, the existence of a third country was gradually absorbed into Japanese society, and as a result, Yakuza was applauded by citizens as if he were a samurai in the past. In particular, the Yamaguchi organization, led by the third leader Taoka, actively fought against third countries centering on Osaka and Kobe, making it an object of envy for bullies at the time. Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara recently received criticism from domestic and foreign media for his remarks, saying, "If a disturbance occurs, the Athletics Self-Defense Force should suppress it." 4. The police took special measures after public criticism over Yakuza's actions, such as lawlessness, caused by damage to ordinary citizens during the fierce protests between organizations such as the Osaka War and the Kyushu War. In 1991, the Japanese police took strong measures called the "Act on the Prevention of Illegal Acts by Violence Members," also known as the "Act on the Control of Violence." This law was a kind of declaration of war proposed by the Japanese police against Yakuza. It was a law that was unanimously passed by all lawmakers, including the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and the Communist Party, which had opposed everything. If the number of ex-convicts, such as murder, is more than a certain percentage of △ members, the police set up three clauses, such as △ leader hierarchically controlling the organization by means of violence, and began special management. Currently, there are 25 "designated gangs" by the Japanese National Public Security Committee, including the Yamaguchi organization in Osaka, Inagawa Kai in Tokyo, Sumiyoshigai in Tokyo, and Kyokudogai in Tokyo. When this happened, the Yakuja of these designated gangs gathered in one place and were seen taking measures, such as holding a class to avoid the new law of the gang through their advisors. They began to openly protest as another countermeasure.
For example, Mrs. Yakuza also showed a funny rare scene of a protest march against it. "The gangsters are different from Yakuza," he said, taking to the streets with a picket against the enforcement of the law. They said that this law could not be applied because they were Yakuza, not gangsters. They also protested, "Yakuza contributed to maintaining security during the chaotic period right after World War II, was in charge of protecting factors against leftists and third-country (Chosun) riots, and even visited us during the election season." However, the Japanese police fought a war with Yakuza, calling the law the "Robber Countermeasures Act" with enormous budget and public support. As a result, some Yakuza organizations began to transform into right-wing organizations only on the surface. So now there are about 1,000 large and small right-wing organizations. Another Yakuza's response was to pretend that the existing organization was a legitimate company. All the bosses turned into presidents. They also made guidelines containing countermeasures for each article to the Violence Control Act and distributed them to members of the organization. It has also begun to cross the NASDAQ market in the securities industry to raise funds. Yakuza-related companies have made unfair demands by disclosing stocks or making weak points against listed venture companies. In September last year, the "Securities Market Violence Exclusion Promotion Committee" was formed in Osaka. The committee was the first meeting formed across Japan to exchange information and supervise Yakuza at all times in cooperation between the police and the securities industry to drive him out of the stock market. If you look at their activities through the website opened by the Osaka Regional Violence Department Center, you can see how to respond to Yakuja's approach by classifying them into each job. In the question-and-answer section for teenagers, it explains that if you become a Yakuza, you have little freedom in cleaning and cooking at the office all day, or in the case of a bodyguard when a boss leaves. In addition, there are many drug addicts among Yakuza, and it suggests countermeasures to prevent teenagers from falling for the temptation to join the Yakuza group. For teenagers who are afraid of sanctions such as cutting their fingers even if they try to get out of the Yakuza organization, consulting with the violence deportation center will send a "stop order" to the boss so that they can withdraw. In addition, the cost of litigation against Yakuza is lent without interest, and consolation money is also paid to those affected.
댓글 없음:
댓글 쓰기