The Red Flag Incident (Japanese: 赤旗事件, Hepburn: Akahata Jiken) refers to a political rally that took place in Tokyo, Japan, on June 22, 1908.
His release was met with by crowd waving red flags carrying Anarchist Communist slogans such as Museifu Kyōsan (無政府共産, "anarcho-communism") and Kakumei (革命, "revolution") and a chorus of communist songs.
The police attacked and suppressed the small demonstration, and ten prominent activists, including Ōsugi Sakae, Hitoshi Yamakawa, Kanno Sugako, and Kanson Arahata, were arrested.
Although a relatively minor event in the complicated history of Meiji politics, it gained notability later, when the incarceration of certain participants in the rally (including Ōsugi, Yamakawa and Arahata) protected them from being involved in a much more prominent crackdown, the High Treason Incident, which resulted in a number of activists being sentenced to death.
This incident marked the start of stronger government action against the socialist movement in Japan.