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  • 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.

It's just before 5am. A small convoy is headed through the outskirts

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