The Free Press Journal

ROYAL WEDDING THAT WAS ON HOLD FOR THREE YEARS

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Japanese Princess Mako's fiancé returned to Japan on Monday for their wedding, which was suspended for more than three years because of a financial dispute involving his mother. Kei Komuro, 29, arrived from New York, where he studied law and plans to work as a lawyer, with his hair in a ponytail, a bold statement by Japanese standards for someone marrying a princess in the tradition-bound imperial family. Mako, also 29, is a niece of Emperor Naruhito. She and Komuro, who were classmates at Tokyo's Internatio­nal Christian University, announced in September 2017 their intent to marry the following year, but the financial dispute surfaced two months later and resulted in their wedding being suspended. The financial dispute involved whether the 4 million yen ($36,000) his mother received from her former fiancé and spent on Komuro's education in Japan was a loan or a gift.

Komuro left for New York in 2018 to study law, and this is the first time he has returned since then. He made no comments at the airport, bowed silently and left in a car. The couple is expected to register their marriage in October and start a new life together in New York.

His mother's financial dispute was an embarrassm­ent for the imperial family and divided public opinion. Mako's father, Crown Prince Akishino, asked Komuro to provide a clear explanatio­n and expressed mixed feelings about the marriage plans.

Many Japanese said the marriage should be scrapped, while others said the couple should pursue their romance.

Mako, apparently aware that her wedding is not fully celebrated by the people, reportedly offered to decline all official wedding rituals and a payment of up to 150 million yen ($1.35 million) she is entitled to receive when leaving the imperial family.

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