Demonstrators taking part in a 'protest rave' against racism and nationalist party Sanseito ahead of the upper house election in the Shinkuku district of Tokyo in July. - AP
WARABI, Japan: Turkish kebab restaurant worker Gur Sinan "loves" and feels welcome in Japan but anxiety is growing in a country with historically low levels of immigration, just as the ruling party picks a new leader.
"I want to stay here for a long time," Sinan, 30, told AFP in Warabi, dotted with halal stores and shops with Chinese signs.
