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Velvet Revolver rock band says denied Japan visas
11/20/2007 12:14 AM, Reuters
Grammy Award-winning U.S. hard rock band
Velvet Revolver said it would not perform in Japan this month
as scheduled because the authorities had refused them visas due
to previous run-ins with the law.
Japanese immigration officials appear to have taken
exception to the backgrounds of various band members "which
have included arrests," the band said in a statement on its Web
site (www.velvetrevolver.com).
"We want to apologize to our fans in Japan that we won't be
able to perform our scheduled concerts," it said.
"We don't understand why the authorities won't give us
visas when they granted them for us in 2005. We love Japan and
look forward to our return there."
A spokesman for the immigration department at the Justice
Ministry said he could not comment on individual cases.
But under Japanese law, anyone with a drug conviction can
be refused entry.
Velvet Revolver features three members of rowdy rock
legends Guns N' Roses and the Stone Temple Pilots' volatile
former frontman Scott Weiland, who has been arrested several
times on drug-related charges.
The band had been due to perform four concerts between
November 26 and November 30 in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya and
Yokohama to promote its current album "Libertad."
The band said it was appealing against the immigration
authorities' decision, but the process would take months.
Velvet Revolver will start their Australian tour as scheduled
on December 4.
(Writing by Miral Fahmy and Isabel Reynolds; editing by
Roger Crabb)
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