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About 60 local residents walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate through the shoppette gate on Nov. 5, 2012, following a signing of a formal agreement among the Marine Corps on Okinawa and Ginowan and Chatan, which enables local residents to gain access to Camp Foster and Marine Corps Ari Station Futenma in the event of major natural disaster.

About 60 local residents walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate through the shoppette gate on Nov. 5, 2012, following a signing of a formal agreement among the Marine Corps on Okinawa and Ginowan and Chatan, which enables local residents to gain access to Camp Foster and Marine Corps Ari Station Futenma in the event of major natural disaster. (Chiyomi Sumida/Stars and Stripes)

About 60 local residents walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate through the shoppette gate on Nov. 5, 2012, following a signing of a formal agreement among the Marine Corps on Okinawa and Ginowan and Chatan, which enables local residents to gain access to Camp Foster and Marine Corps Ari Station Futenma in the event of major natural disaster.

About 60 local residents walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate through the shoppette gate on Nov. 5, 2012, following a signing of a formal agreement among the Marine Corps on Okinawa and Ginowan and Chatan, which enables local residents to gain access to Camp Foster and Marine Corps Ari Station Futenma in the event of major natural disaster. (Chiyomi Sumida/Stars and Stripes)

Children from local day care centers join in a disaster drill Nov. 5, 2012, on Camp Foster. The Marine Corps and two local communities that host Marine Corps Air Station Futenma and Camp Foster exchange an agreement; enabling local residents to gain access to the two Marine installations to evacuate for higher elevations should a major disaster hit the island prefecture.

Children from local day care centers join in a disaster drill Nov. 5, 2012, on Camp Foster. The Marine Corps and two local communities that host Marine Corps Air Station Futenma and Camp Foster exchange an agreement; enabling local residents to gain access to the two Marine installations to evacuate for higher elevations should a major disaster hit the island prefecture. (Chiyomi Sumida/Stars and Stripes)

Children from local daycare centers walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate to the Shoppette gate during a Nov. 5, 2012, disaster drill on the Marine Corps base.  In the wake of March 11, 2011 earthquake in Japan?s northern region, securing evacuation routes for residents in Okinawa?s waterfront neighborhoods has a priority.

Children from local daycare centers walk through Camp Foster's commissary gate to the Shoppette gate during a Nov. 5, 2012, disaster drill on the Marine Corps base. In the wake of March 11, 2011 earthquake in Japan?s northern region, securing evacuation routes for residents in Okinawa?s waterfront neighborhoods has a priority. (Chiyomi Sumida/Stars and Stripes)

CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — Some Okinawa residents found out Monday that U.S. military bases on the island could be lifesavers.

The Marine Corps and Okinawa communities signed an agreement enabling local residents to gain access to two Marine installations, MCAS Futenma and Camp Foster, to evacuate to higher elevations should a major natural disaster occur like the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami that devastated northern Japan.

The two sides have been discussing coordination and cooperation since then.

“Disaster preparedness is everyone’s responsibility,” Maj. Gen. Peter Talleri, commanding general of Marine Corps Base Camp Smedley D. Butler and deputy commander, Marine Corps Bases Japan, said during the signing ceremony at Camp Foster. “We strive to be contributing members of the local communities in which we live.”

He said the 9.0-magnitude earthquake changed forever how people view military installations and their future in Japan.

While Operation Tomodachi, a rescue and relief operation mounted by U.S. Forces in Japan after the disaster, was widely welcomed, acceptance of the military presence has been marred on Okinawa by two recent incidents involving servicemembers and the controversial deployment of MV-22 Ospreys, which many residents consider unsafe.

The agreement affects residents of Chatan and Ginowan, where large residential areas and shopping malls are concentrated along the waterfront. Mayors of both communities praised the agreement.

“How to make speedy evacuation to higher elevations for residents has been the biggest and urgent issue,” Ginowan Mayor Atsuhi Sakima said. “I am certain that the agreement made today will contribute to protect many lives from tsunami.”

About 60 residents, including children from local daycare centers, participated in a disaster drill at Camp Foster on Monday morning, entering from the base’s commissary gate.

“The March 11 disaster made me very nervous,” said Fumiko Arakaki, 73, who lives near the popular Araha Beach in Chatan after finishing her half-hour evacuation walk with her husband, Morishige. “Knowing that we have this evacuation route is a great assurance.”

sumidac@pstripes.osd.mil

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