Iran Daily

Poverty of aging Japanese population fueling ‘silver crime’ wave

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Nearly one in four elderly Japanese convicts is reoffendin­g and ending up back behind bars within two years of being released, according to new government figures.

Poverty is thought to be a key factor fueling the surge in socalled silver crimes committed by Japan’s elderly people, and is one particular­ly negative side effect of the rapid pace at which its society is aging, telegraph.co.uk wrote.

The annual white paper on crime, published by the Justice Ministry, found that elderly criminals were more likely to be sent back to jail than their younger counterpar­ts.

More than 23 percent of over-65s reoffend within two years, compared to just 11 percent of those under 29.

The number of imprisoned Japanese seniors also quadrupled since 1997 to 2,498 last year, accounting for more than 12 percent of all prisoners, according to the report.

The most common reasons for imprisonme­nt among elderly convicts were petty crimes such as shopliftin­g and theft, reflecting the financial hardships facing a growing swathe of Japan’s elderly population.

The rise in silver crime goes hand in hand with Japan’s fast aging society, with the nation on track to soon become the world’s first ‘ultra aged’ country, defined by 28 percent of a population being over-65.

Japan is currently home to a population of 127 million, 27.3 percent of which is over the age of 65.

The steadily growing number of senior convicts prompted the Japanese government to approve a plan earlier this year to assign nursing care staff to about half of the nation’s prisons.

The new figures came to light just weeks after a 74-year-old unemployed man from Osaka was unveiled as a serial burglar dubbed the ‘Heisei Ninja’. He eluded police for eight years while allegedly conducting more than 200 nocturnal break-ins dressed in top-totoe black.

 ??  ?? telegraph.co.uk
telegraph.co.uk

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