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CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — A 21-year-old Navy sailor was arrested on suspicion of drunk driving and causing two accidents while driving the wrong way on an Okinawa highway, police officials said Sunday.

The incident appeared certain to further enflame the anti-U.S. military backlash for the recent arrests of a civilian U.S. base worker in connection with the slaying of an Okinawa woman and a U.S. sailor for the rape of a Japanese touristr. Those separate incidents led to tightened liberty restrictions being imposed May 29 on Okinawa, including a ban on off-base drinking.

Aimee Mejia, a Navy petty officer second class assigned to the Navy Munitions Command at Kadena Air Base, was travelling southbound in the northbound lane of Highway 58, a main artery on Okinawa’s west coast, at about 11:40 p.m. Saturday near Kadena Gate 4, police said.

Her car crashed into an oncoming vehicle, injuring a 35-year-old woman in the chest. Mejia’s car then struck another car, bruising the arm of a 30-year-old man, police said.

A Breathalyzer test revealed a blood-alcohol level of 0.18, six times the legal limit in Japan, police said.

Cmdr. Ron Flanders, spokesman for Naval Forces Japan, called the incident “deeply upsetting,” particularly because it happened during a month-long period of mourning — declared by the top U.S. military official in Okinawa — for Rina Shimabukuro, whose body was found in a wooded area after being missing for several weeks.

“We are constantly evaluating our policies to ensure they’re effective,” Flanders said. “Navy leadership is currently talking about ways that we can address negative trends, not just in Okinawa, but for all sailors in Japan.”

Former Marine Kenneth Franklin Gadson, 32, a civilian contractor at Kadena, was arrested in connection with Shimabukuro’s death. Gadson, who goes by the name of his Japanese wife, Shinzato, remains in Japanese custody in accordance with the status of forces agreement.

The liberty restrictions, which also moved up a 1 a.m. curfew to midnight, took effect the same that that 24-year-old Seaman Apprentice Justin Castellanos, a corpsman assigned to Camp Schwab, pleaded guilty to raping an intoxicated Japanese woman at a Naha hotel.

The two incidents have triggered anti-base protests on Okinawa — a major demonstration is slated for June 19 — and cast a pall over President Barack Obama’s trip to Japan at the end of May.

In line with the period of mourning, several festivals, celebrations and concerts on U.S. facilities have been postponed, including next weekend’s Futenma Flightline Fair.

A Japan-wide curfew for U.S. servicemembers has been in effect since late 2012 following the rape of an Okinawa woman by two visiting Navy sailors. The curfew was eased somewhat in 2014.

The U.S. military presence on Okinawa has long irritated some residents, who want to see the troop presence reduced. More than half of the U.S. servicemembers in Japan are based on Okinawa, and there are long-delayed plans to shift some of them to Guam.

ornauer.dave@stripes.com

Twitter @ornauer_stripes

sumida.chiyomi@stripes.com

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Dave Ornauer has been employed by or assigned to Stars and Stripes Pacific almost continuously since March 5, 1981. He covers interservice and high school sports at DODEA-Pacific schools and manages the Pacific Storm Tracker.

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