-
Sixers down Rockets behind Embiid triple-double
-
Japan PM Takaichi dissolves parliament for snap election
-
T20 cricket World Cup row overshadows India's Olympic ambitions
-
Trump's MAGA movement ramps up attacks on 'progressive white women'
-
Pakistan battles legions of fake doctors
-
Sabalenka digs deep as Alcaraz sets sights on Melbourne last 16
-
Asian stocks extend gains but US concerns hit dollar, boost gold
-
Emotional Sabalenka comes through test to make last 16 at Australian Open
-
Rescuers dig for six missing in New Zealand landslide
-
Chile police arrest fourth suspect in deadly wildfires
-
Japan punk rock lawyer leads climate justice fight
-
Rodman inks record-setting contract with NWSL'S Spirit
-
TikTok establishes joint venture to end US ban threat
-
Dodgers' latest splurge reignites baseball salary cap debate
-
Iran warns 'finger on trigger' as Trump says Tehran wants talks
-
'Basic tennis etiquette' - Navratilova, Davenport condemn Osaka
-
Fuming Kyrgios 'does not know' what comes after Australian Open
-
Arsenal face Man Utd test as City search for spark
-
'Vigilant' Europe eyes next Trump shock after Greenland climbdown
-
Workers dig for the missing in New Zealand landslide
-
Scheffler tied for second behind Lee, Coody in La Quinta
-
Patriots vie for Super Bowl return against Broncos
-
Arctic blast to wallop N. America -- is climate change to blame?
-
NYC sues to block Dr. Phil-fronted police TV show
-
Intel shares plunge on earnings expectations
-
White House X account alters protester photo to add tears
-
US negotiators meet Putin for high-stakes Ukraine talks
-
US stocks rally again after Trump backs off Greenland tariff threat
-
Ecuador, Colombia ramp up trade war with tit-for-tat energy levies
-
Trump bruised hand on table, White House says of new photos
-
Japan PM Takaichi set to dissolve parliament for snap election
-
Carney answers Trump: 'Canada doesn't live because of US'
-
Trump pitches Miami for World Expo 2035
-
Trump sues JPMorgan Chase, CEO Dimon, claims 'debanked' for politics
-
Chile police arrest third suspect in wildfire-ravaged south
-
Galthie confirms Dupont as France captain for Six Nations
-
Villa seal place in Europa League last 16 as Celtic draw in Italy
-
Musk's Grok created three million sexualized images, research says
-
Gazans pay homage to Palestinian journalists killed by Israel
-
With 'Board of Peace,' Trump tries hand at institution-making, to wide doubt
-
At Davos, Zelensky blasts EU, says US 'security guarantees' ready
-
French navy boards tanker 'from Russia' in Mediterranean
-
Trump takes Davos on wild ride
-
Venezuela moves to liberalize oil sector, in boost for Trump
-
Venezuela looks to petrodollars to bring down prices
-
Europe relieved but 'vigilant' after Trump Greenland climbdown
-
Freezing Kyiv residents seek warmth in trains and tents
-
Musk makes Davos debut with promise of robots for all
-
Track star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone announces pregnancy
-
NYC sues to block Dr. Phil-fronted police documentary
Japan punk rock lawyer leads climate justice fight
Japan's punk rock lawyer Akihiro Shima was belting out songs at a packed bar in Tokyo, sporting a mohawk and bright-red jacket, nine days after filing a landmark climate lawsuit.
The 63-year-old rallied over 450 plaintiffs across Japan last month in a landmark lawsuit seeking damages from the central government over its alleged "grossly inadequate" response to climate change.
For Shima, the suit is "the culmination of everything" he has spent years fighting for, first as a musician and then a lawyer.
When the punk movement barrelled through Japan in the late 1970s, then-teenaged Shima was convinced he would "change society through rock-n-roll", he told AFP.
Decades later, he has lost none of his fervour.
Roaring the lyrics "Free Palestine!" and "Dance in the street for your rights" at a tiny, dimly-lit Tokyo bar in December Shima lauded his latest legal battle between songs.
"There are people spewing carbon dioxide because of their selfish lifestyles, while people who don't live like this at all are seeing their islands on the verge of sinking," he told audience members during the December performance.
"Our future generations will be the biggest victim," he said, eliciting a few nods.
- 'Superbly cool' -
A longtime fan of Shima, 60-year-old caregiver Kumiko Aoki was among those inspired to join the lawsuit as a plaintiff.
"The fact that he peppers his songs with clear messages like 'no war'... I think that's superbly cool," she told AFP at the bar.
Aoki and her fellow plaintiffs argue that Japan's "unconstitutional" inaction on climate change violates their constitutional rights to health and a peaceful life, and criticise Tokyo's emissions reduction targets as unambitious.
Japan is committed to cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 60 percent by 2035 and 73 percent by 2040 compared with 2013 levels -- reaching net-zero by mid-century.
Experts say the suit's chances of winning are slim, but it could raise awareness and stir public opinion.
For Shima, the suit is the endpoint of a journey that began as a teenager, when he read the Japanese novel "Compound Pollution" -- a diatribe against industrial waste, agricultural chemicals and food additives.
Shima explained that as a teen poring over the novel he'd thought: "As long as we remain hell-bent on pursuing materialism and an economic status, our planet won't hold up."
He became a household "radical", chivvying his parents into replacing laundry detergents with bar soap and boycotting their car and got involved in other causes, from poverty to discrimination.
- Nude shoot -
For many years, music was his medium, and he embraced punk's anti-establishment message enthusiastically.
He and his musician friends even shot a CD cover nude in front of Japan's parliament as a political protest.
But as Shima turned 41, "it dawned on me that all my talk about social revolution or my niche band activity wasn't changing society a bit".
He went back to school and became a lawyer in 2010, with his first lawsuit naming a polar bear as a plaintiff and arguing global warming amounts to pollution.
After the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, he led a lawsuit against major nuclear reactor suppliers and also formed a new band: "Shima Kick Jiro & No Nukes Rights."
Given his age, he acknowledges his latest lawsuit might be his last, but believes it addresses profound questions about the future.
"We intend for this lawsuit to prompt the question of what kind of society we want to live in 30 years from now," he said.
For all his environmental passion, Shima admits he hasn't made songs about climate change yet.
"I haven't been able to find a way to make words like 'climate' sound cool," he said.
Could his landmark lawsuit change that?
"I will try," he said with a smile.
R.Braegger--VB