Japan joined an international operation in March against pirates in the Gulf of Aden [GALLO/GETTY]
Japan's parliament has passed a law allowing the nation's forces to open fire on pirates operating off the coast of Somalia.
The new law will allow Japan's maritime forces to attack pirate ships that approach other vessels in the Gulf of Aden, a key shipping route.
Yasukazu Hamada, Japan's defence minister, issued an order on Friday to prepare for "an immediate and appropriate implementation" of the navy's new mission after the law takes effect in late July, the AFP news agency reported.
The law will also allow Japanese forces to protect any commercial ships threatened by pirates, and not just those sailing under Japan's flag or carrying Japanese cargo.
Piracy 'threat'
"Japan can take action more effectively against piracy, in co-operation with other countries," Taro Aso, Japan's prime minister, said in a statement.
"Piracy is a threat not only to Japan, but to the international community and a challenge Japan should proactively deal with," he said.
The constitutionally pacifist nation joined the US, China and more than 20 other countries in March in an international operation against pirates who have attacked ships in the Gulf of Aden.
As part of its assistance, Japanese officials deployed two destroyers and two maritime surveillance aircraft to the region.
But the destroyers had no mandate to use force except in self-defence.
The military mission is unprecedented for Japan, which imposed constitutional limits to prohibit the use of force to resolve international disputes after the second world war.
But the country's more powerful lower house of parliament voted the bill into law on Friday after the upper house rejected it.
Opposing parliament members said the move could erode the nation's pacifist constitution.
Despite international piracy efforts, the International Maritime Bureau has said that more ships have been attacked off Somalia in the first six months of 2009 than in all of last year.
Source: Aljazeera.com
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