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It's a boy for Japan after 40 years
Foreign Desk Report
TOKYO—Japan's Princess Kiko gave birth to the royal family's first male
heir in four decades on Wednesday, easing a succession crisis and
quelling an emotional political debate over whether to allow women on
the throne.
Kiko, 39, underwent a Caesarean section at a Tokyo hospital, bearing a
boy who is third in line to the throne after Crown Prince Naruhito and
Kiko's husband, Prince Akishino, 40. The baby's name was to be announced
next Tuesday.
The arrival of a new prince — Emperor Akihito's first grandson — defused
a succession dilemma in the coming generation of the royal family, which
traces its roots back some 1,500 years.
The closely watched birth was also likely to put the brakes on a
divisive debate over whether to change Japan's 1947 imperial law to
allow women to inherit the throne.
While eight women have ruled over the centuries, the last taking the
throne in 1762, they served mostly as placeholders until a suitable male
could be found, and none passed the crown to their offspring.
The boy, the first royal male heir born since Akishino in 1965, was born
at 8:27 a.m. Wednesday and weighed 5 lbs. 10 oz., the Imperial Household
Agency said. Both child and mother were in good condition.
The birth took place under intense public scrutiny and expectation. News
of Kiko's pregnancy and delivery date led to rallies in shares of
baby-care companies amid hopes that other Japanese would be inspired to
have more children.
"That's great," gushed Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi when he heard
the news.
Kiko, who already has two daughters, was hospitalized on Aug. 16 after
showing symptoms of partial placenta previa, in which part of the
placenta drops too low in the uterus. Officials, however, said the
pregnancy was never in jeopardy.
The birth set in motion a cycle of ancient imperial ceremonies. On
Wednesday afternoon, for instance, an emissary from Akihito was
delivering a special sword to Akishino's residence as a symbol of
protection for the new infant.
The gender of the baby had been a closely guarded palace secret, though
Japanese tabloids had speculated the child would be a boy — the hope of
conservative Japanese who want to preserve the male-only imperial line.
"I'm from the old generation, so I think it's better for a boy to become
the emperor," said Chioko Hasegawa, a 74-year-old cleaning woman, as she
worked in central Tokyo.
The birth follows a tumultuous decade for Japan's royal family, which is
still highly respected by the public and is largely shielded from view
by the secretive Imperial Household Agency.
Emperor Akihito's eldest son, Naruhito, 46, has a daughter — Aiko, 4 —
with his wife Masako, but the couple have no sons.
The imperative of producing a male heir may have taken its toll on the
Harvard-educated Masako, 42, who gave up a career in diplomacy to marry
Naruhito. She suffered a miscarriage in 1999 before Aiko was born and
has struggled with stress-induced depression in recent years.
The possibility there would be no male in the next generation had
prompted serious discussion about allowing a female to assume the throne
and pass it on to her offspring.
Such a step was recommended by a high-level panel late last year, and
Koizumi vowed to submit a reform bill to parliament.
But conservatives mounted a vociferous offensive against the plan,
arguing that allowing the daughter of an emperor to pass the throne to
her child would destroy a precious Japanese tradition.
Opponents suggested the revival of concubines to produce imperial heirs,
or the reinstatement of the aristocracy — banned after World War II — to
widen the pool of imperial male candidates.
The debate was so fractious that Koizumi shelved the reform after Kiko's
pregnancy was announced in February, and it was likely there would be no
rush to return to the fray following Wednesday's birth.
"I see the debate stopping completely for a while," said Koichi Yokota,
a constitutional law expert at Ryutsu Keizai University in Ibaraki.
"It's a divisive issue, and not something the new prime minister will
want to tackle right away."
In addition, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe, a conservative who is
widely expected to replace Koizumi as premier later this month,
suggested Wednesday he was less enthusiastic for reform than the prime
minister, calling for caution.
"Reforming the Imperial Household Law is an important issue that
concerns the stability of the imperial family," he told reporters. "We
must carry on the debate in a careful and calm manner."
Some Japanese, however, argued that the reform debate should continue,
since the birth of a single boy simply postpones the question.
"There is no need to stick to a male heir. Regardless of gender, whoever
is next in line should take the throne," said Mai Yanagida, 20. "I think
it's fine if Princess Aiko becomes the next empress". |