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| As it stands, the future of the Japanese imperial family rests on 12-year-old Hisahito, the son of Crown Prince Naruhito's younger brother and the last eligible male heir (AFP Photo/Koji Sasahara) |
Japanese Emperor Akihito's historic abdication later this month has reignited concerns over the future of what is believed to be one of the world's oldest royal families, given its hereditary, male-only succession rules.
As it stands,
the fate of the Japanese imperial family rests on 12-year-old Hisahito, the son
of Crown Prince Naruhito's younger brother and the last eligible male heir.
Japan's
centuries-old succession would be broken if Hisahito does not have a male child
as the Imperial Household Law, in place since 1947, does not allow women to
ascend the Chrysanthemum Throne.
That means
Naruhito's only child, 17-year-old Princess Aiko, is not in line to inherit the
throne.
While
public attitudes seem to be shifting to change the succession laws to allow
women to rule, the chance of concrete reform looks remote.
According
to a poll by the Yomiuri Shimbun daily between October and November, nearly
two-thirds want the law revised to allow women to be the rightful heir.
"I
just wonder why Princess Aiko cannot ascend the throne," Mizuho, a Tokyo
resident in her 30s who only gave her first name, told AFP.
"If
it's just because she's a girl, then I think it's out of place in the current
era," she said.
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The
Japanese royal family tree. (AFP Photo/AFP)
|
"Why
don't we allow female heirs like Queen Elizabeth in the British monarchy?"
Under the
current rules, female imperial family members also lose their royal status upon
marriage to a commoner, a point highlighted by the engagement of one of
Akihito's granddaughters, Princess Mako, to her college sweetheart.
'Sun
goddess'
Traditionalists
are vehemently opposed to any change in the law but there have been as many as
eight empresses, with the last one, Gosakuramachi, on the throne about 250
years ago.
And the
imperial family, which has a myth-filled history dating back more than 2,600
years, is said to be descended from legendary sun goddess Amaterasu.
When the
parliament passed a one-off rule allowing the ageing emperor to step down in
2017, it also urged the government to "swiftly study" reforms that
would allow the sons of royal women to become emperor.
Tokyo has
said these discussions will begin soon after May 1, when Naruhito ascends the
throne.
But the
government has also decided that only male royal adults will attend the main
abdication ceremony, during which the new emperor will inherit the traditional
regalia such as a sacred sword and jewel.
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Japanese
Crown Prince Naruhito's only child, 17-year-old Princess Aiko, is not
in line
to inherit the throne (AFP Photo/HANDOUT)
|
Politicians
are dodging the looming issue of male-only succession because "they do not
want to shoulder the responsibility", Yuji Otabe, professor of Japanese
history at Shizuoka University of Welfare, told AFP.
"If
you think about the heredity system, a woman is also of imperial blood,"
he said, voicing concerns about the future of the Japanese royal line if the
situation does not change.
'Great
pressure'
Another
consequence of the male-only succession line is the enormous pressure to
conceive boys to keep the line going.
The future
emperor and empress were under huge pressure to have a boy but their only child
-- born in 2001 -- was Princess Aiko.
The
"crisis" was averted when Prince Hisahito was born in 2006 to the
Crown Prince's younger brother Akishino, meaning the male blood line could
continue.
After Crown
Prince Naruhito takes the throne, Akishino is next in line, followed by
Hisahito.
Crown
Princess Masako, a former high-flying diplomat, has struggled for years with a
stress-related illness after joining the tradition-heavy household, which some
have put down to the pressure of producing a male heir.
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Japanese
Crown Prince Naruhito and his bride, Masako Owada, in full traditional
Japanese
Imperial wedding costumes at the Imperial Palace in 1993 (AFP Photo/Handout)
|
Hideto
Tsuboi, professor of modern Japanese literature and history at the
International Research Center for Japanese Studies, argued that Masako's
illness epitomises the difference between Japanese and British royals.
Japanese
imperial family members "do not enjoy normal human rights due to too much
emphasis on" the male-blood lineage succession system compared to the
British monarchy, said Tsuboi.
Analyst
Otabe also pointed to the "great pressure" on any woman marrying into
the imperial family to bear a son.
"Who
would want to marry (Hisahito)?" he asked.
Tokyo
resident Mizuho called for change, saying: "I really don't think it has to
be a man."
"As
long as the person has the qualities needed to take over the throne, whether
the heir is male or female doesn't matter to me."




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