Photos: One Japanese motorcycle gang’s festive police riot

For the Bōsōzoku, clashing with cops is a rite of passage

Rian Dundon
Timeline
3 min readOct 13, 2016

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Bōsōzoku celebrate after a night of rioting on the streets of Hiroshima.

If yankii describes a broad category of disaffected Japanese teens who dye their hair, rock retro American styles and act unruly, the bōsōzoku subset are the tough ones. These motorcycle gangs—known for their traffic-snarling group rides and petty crime—have been around since the 1950s but came to prominence in the ’80s and ’90s, especially in southern Japan’s Fukuoka prefecture. Bōsōzoku are also prime recruits for more serious yakuza gangs and uyoku dantai rightwing nationalist groups, who come from similarly working class roots.

It’s not uncommon to see one of Japan’s numerous uyoku groups protesting or rioting against their leftwing counterparts. Though aggressive, these fights with police are usually more street theater than serious violence, with an implied set of rules dictating how far either side will go to prove their point.

In 1999, American photographer Stuart Isett stumbled upon a group of bōsōzoku staging a full scale battle with cops in Hiroshima. “Apparently it was an annual rite, go downtown and have a smash-up with the cops,” he explains. “Folks were watching from the sidewalks with their kids, it was all very organized rioting, in the way only the Japanese can do.”

Photos © Stuart Isett. Hiroshima, Japan, 1999.

Read Stephanie Buck on the ‘yankii’ tribes of Japan:

Bōsōzoku gang members gather on the streets of Hiroshima to prepare for a night of rioting against police.
A bōsōzoku yankii throws bottles at police during night of rioting on the streets of Hiroshima.
Members of a bōsōzoku girl gang hang out and drink beer after watching their male counterparts fight with police.
Bōsōzoku gang members rioting on the streets of Hiroshima.
A bloodied bōsōzoku after a night of rioting on the streets of Hiroshima.
Bōsōzoku gang member carry a flag reading “we are bad boys of the good team” after a night of rioting on the streets of Hiroshima.

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Rian Dundon
Timeline

Photographer + writer. Former Timeline picture editor.