Unrest in Hinomoto

The Hinoan dissident campaign (日野元反体制派作戦), also referred to as the Continuation, is an ongoing in Hinomoto, a self-governing region of Yamatai. In 1995, the Hinomoto Insurrection came to an end with the Dual 10 Accords between the Hinoan government and the various rebel groups, with most of the rebel groups disarmed and registered under the New Congress of Parties. Breakaway groups opposed to the ceasefire and to the peace agreements have continued a low-level armed campaign in Hinomoto against the Hinoan Government and the Yamataian Armed Forces since then.

Though officially described by the Hinoan government as a single ongoing campaign, the rebel groups are largely disunited and occasionally skirmish with each other or local crime syndicates. Most attacks have been carried out against structures and personnel of the Hinoan government, targeting the Hinoan police and Yamataian soldiers with gun and bomb attacks as well as with mortars and rockets on rarer occasions. Bombings that are meant to cause disruption have also been carried out in Hinomoto and even in mainland Yamatai. Some of the groups have also claimed responsibility for various cyber attacks. Political support for these groups is almost non-existent.

To date, six Yamataian soldiers, two Hinoan police officers, and three Internal Security Force personnel have been killed as part of the campaign. The majority of these personnel were killed in targeted assassinations. At least 60 civilians have also been killed by rebel groups, 23 of which were killed in the 2003 North-East Shinkyuko Disaster, which was allegedly caused by hackers from the 46th Battalion, a socialist-nationalist terrorist group with ties to Arshavat.

2012 Unrest
In 2012, the Hinoan Nationalist Militia (HNM) emerged in Kotoyama, a former hotbed of nationalist activity and the hometown of many Hinoan Liberation Front founders. They began a localised guerrilla campaign, mainly targeting Imperial Army personnel stationed at Imperial Army Base Kotoyama and Camp Hakutai, both in the vicinity of the city. Imperial Army personnel and local police were randomly assaulted and the group was also behind petty crimes like robberies of local convenience stores. In July 2012, a local mayoral candidate's rally was bombed by the HNM. The main HNM forest hideout was eventually discovered in an abandoned mine and was raided by the Imperial Army and ISF.

In response to the sudden spike in violence, the New Congress of Parties chairman Nabeshima Kagetake condemned the attacks and denied that any of the former rebel groups registered with the New Congress were responsible.

In early 2013, a cell of the HNM re-emerged and launched an all-out attack on Camp Hakutai, assassinating the commander of the Imperial Army's 28th Infantry Battalion, but they were shortly wiped out. The ISF, with support from the Yamataian Imperial Security Agency, then tracked down the remnants of the cell and killed or captured most remaining members, though some members still remain at large.

2014 Nakayama Riots
Something to do with the new airport and former collective farms.

2017 Infighting and Operation Gaijin
Divisions between revolutionary groups had been worsening since the aftermath of the 2014 riots, and various splinter groups began operating of heir own accord. In September 2017, major bomb attacks were carried out in Heian and Wanshu by a cell of an unknown revolutionary group. The Representative of the People's Parties was ordered to discover the affiliation of the terrorist cell. Subsequently, the ISA conducted Operation Gaijin, a black-ops mission that resulted in the destabilisation and collapse of most of the more-unruly revolutionary groups. Evidence was then found that the Representative himself had orchestrated the attacks in an attempt to further his own political career, but before he could be arrested by the ISA he was assassinated by fellow revolutionaries.