The Star Malaysia

Feeling cast adrift in Japan

Dual nationals ashamed and embarrasse­d over treatment

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TOKYO: When Yuki Shiraishi passes through immigratio­n at Tokyo airport, she is hit with a wave of shame and embarrassm­ent.

While her parents whizz through the line for Japanese nationals, she is stuck with the foreigners, surreptiti­ously trying to hide her Swiss passport.

Shiraishi is one of an estimated million citizens forced to give up their Japanese nationalit­y when they became dual nationals.

The issue was thrust into the spotlight when tennis star Naomi Osaka won the US Open. The 21-year-old has a Japanese mother, a Haitian father and was born in Japan but raised in the United States.

She has dual citizenshi­p but will technicall­y have to decide by her 22nd birthday which flag to play under, unless Japanese authoritie­s turn a blind eye to a special case.

Shiraishi, now 34, is battling for change. With a group of others, she filed a suit this year against the Japanese government in a bid to reform what critics see as an antiquated and obsolete system.

She was born and raised in Switzerlan­d, her parents working for the UN and the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees.

Shortly before she turned 16, she took her parents’ advice and obtained Swiss nationalit­y to facilitate day-to-day administra­tive issues.

It was only when she returned to Japan, six years later, that she realised what that decision meant.

Her father, a lawyer, advised her to return her Japanese passport.

“For him, there was no question of me living ‘hidden’, residing against Japanese laws by holding two passports in secret.”

She went to the consulate and describes a sad experience of feeling thrown out by her own country.

“I realised that, without any reason, I was being rejected. I was being cut away from my country even though I was born with a Japanese passport, my two parents are Japanese and I still have very close ties with Japan,” she said.

What really stung was when her name was transforme­d for official purposes from the traditiona­l kanji letters to a Western-style alphabet.

“I pretended that it was just an administra­tive thing. But in fact, it really hurt,” she said.

Hitoshi Nogawa, who is also suing the government, lost his Japanese nationalit­y after gaining a Swiss passport and blasts what he says is a law stuck in the past.

“Japan was closed off to other countries for around 250 years and the lawmakers at the time never imagined that Japanese people would one day go to work abroad,” said the 75-year-old.

Shiraishi said the law is “absurd” and has “stripped me of my nationalit­y without my consent”.

“I am Japanese and Swiss, like a child who sticks to two parents, not just one of them,” she said.

The relevant department in the justice ministry declined to comment on the case “because it could interfere” with the legal procedure. But authoritie­s recalled that the law cuts both ways – it also allows people the freedom to give up their Japanese nationalit­y if they choose.

According to the letter of the law, anyone who has not chosen either way within the period prescribed is required to make a decision within a month or they are stripped of their nationalit­y.

In practice, though, the justice ministry has never sent such a demand. It says it was aware of 900,000 people with dual nationali- ty between 1985 and 2016. But the actual figure could be larger or smaller.

For Shiki Tomimasu, the attorney in charge of the suit, this makes the law all the more ridiculous.

“Everything rests on a personal declaratio­n so unless an individual admits to having dual nationalit­y, the government will never realise.”

Japan is one of around 50 countries in the world that allows only one nationalit­y. In Asia, China and South Korea also impose such a law.

 ?? AP ?? Larger than life: Masao Tsutsumi, general manager of Osaka-related marketing at Nissan Motor Co., standing with a Leaf electric vehicle in front of a giant poster of Osaka at the company’s showroom in Yokohama.—
AP Larger than life: Masao Tsutsumi, general manager of Osaka-related marketing at Nissan Motor Co., standing with a Leaf electric vehicle in front of a giant poster of Osaka at the company’s showroom in Yokohama.—
 ?? — AFP ?? Decision soon: Osaka with her US Open trophy after she beat Serena Williams in September. She has to decide by her 22nd birthday next year which flag to play under.
— AFP Decision soon: Osaka with her US Open trophy after she beat Serena Williams in September. She has to decide by her 22nd birthday next year which flag to play under.

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