The Sun (Malaysia)

Japan MP’s attack on male child-rearing draws ire

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TOKYO: Japan’s government came under fire yesterday after a MP suggested only women should raise children under three and another urged newly-weds to have at least three kids.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government has made “womenomics” – or boosting women’s participat­ion in the workplace – a priority, as its workforce drops amid a rapidly ageing population.

But Koichi Hagiuda, a senior member of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), touched off a firestorm on Sunday when he said men rearing children might be “unwelcome” for them.

“Children need an environmen­t where they can stay with their mothers ... if you ask infants under three which parent they like more, the answer should be mama, even though there are no firm statistics to support it,” the 54-year-old LDP executive acting secretary-general said.

Those remarks came after another LDP MP, 72-year-old Kanji Kato, doubled down on comments suggesting young couples should produce at least three children, saying he had received supportive responses from across the country.

Yukio Edano, leader of the main opposition Constituti­onal Democratic Party, said the comments were “intolerabl­e”.

“There are many people who cannot give birth to children despite wanting to and there are many single-father families.

“Don’t they notice these facts?”

Sumire Hamada, from rights group Asia-Japan Women’s Resource Centre, said Hagiuda’s comments were “out of the question”.

“What happened to the government’s pledge to build a society where men can participat­e in child-rearing?

“These comments overturn what the government has said, and I’m sure many fathers have been angered by Hagiuda’s rude remarks,” she said.

Another campaigner said the remarks could encourage men to persist in the long working-hours culture endemic in Japan.

“When he said children under three like mothers more than fathers, that’s unacceptab­le.” Tetsuya Ando, founder of the organisati­on Fathering Japan, said.

“That kind of remark puts pressure on working mothers to stay at home while removing fathers’ rights to rear children,” he said.

The 55-year-old is himself a dad-of-three. – AFP

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