Toronto Star

Surrogate father of 13 kids a mystery

Tabloids reported in 2014 that Japanese telecom heir wants 100 to 1,000 children

- MARI YAMAGUCHI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOKYO— A Japanese man who has won legal custody of 13 surrogate children in Thailand has remained virtually anonymous in the Japanese media.

Mitsutoki Shigeta, who was granted sole custody of his children by a Thai court on Tuesday, is the son of the founder of Japanese telecom and insurance company Hikari Tsushin. As a major shareholde­r, he earns millions of dollars a year in dividends.

But in Japan, he keeps an extremely low profile.

Aggressive reporting by Japanese tabloids after his surrogate babies were discovered in a Bangkok condominiu­m in 2014 quickly faded, allegedly after defamation lawsuits and pressure were applied by his father’s company. Now he is only referred to in the Japanese-language media as an anonymous 28-year-old man.

Informatio­n from Tuesday’s court decision, doctors and a fertility clinic has done little to lift the veil of mystery over Shigeta.

A Japanese lawyer who reportedly represente­d Shigeta refused to discuss the case, and officials at Hikari Tsushin were not available for comment Wednesday.

The company started as a business phone and office equipment sales firm and now is listed on the first section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange and has more than 180 subsidiari­es. Shigeta is the oldest of founder Yasu- mitsu Shigeta’s three sons and has businesses in Asian countries including Thailand and Cambodia, where he made arrangemen­ts for the surrogate children.

Japanese tabloids reported in 2014 that Shigeta said he wanted to produce 100 to 1,000 children and that if he were successful, it would cost millions of dollars. He was seeking to purchase equipment to freeze and preserve his “high-quality” sperm at home to allow him to keep producing children even in old age, according to Japanese reports.

Thai authoritie­s have ruled out human traffickin­g and other criminal motives.

Mariam Kukunashvi­li, founder of the New Light clinic in Thailand that recruited some of the babies’ surrogate mothers, told The Associated Press in 2014 that Shigeta told her “he wanted 10 to 15 babies a year and that he wanted to continue the babymaking process until he’s dead.” She said Shigeta also told her that he wanted to run in an election and win by using his big family for voting.

Shigeta’s case, along with several others, helped usher in a Thai law prohibitin­g commercial surrogacy for foreign clients. That law sent much of the country’s surrogacy-forhire business for foreigners to Cambodia, which later passed its own law against it.

Japanese tabloids have reported that Shigeta’s parents were spotted kissing a baby when they visited their son in Cambodia, where he also had several children by surrogate mothers. They were not among the 13 babies in Thailand.

The Thai court said Tuesday that Shigeta plans to send the children to an internatio­nal school and is preparing a house for them in Tokyo, where they will be looked after by nurses and nannies. His lawyer in Thailand said he simply wants a big family.

 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kong Suriyamont­ol, a Thai lawyer representi­ng Mitsutoki Shigeta, said his client simply wants a big family.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Kong Suriyamont­ol, a Thai lawyer representi­ng Mitsutoki Shigeta, said his client simply wants a big family.
 ??  ?? Mitsutoki Shigeta is the son of the founder of Japanese telecom and insurance company Hikari Tsushin.
Mitsutoki Shigeta is the son of the founder of Japanese telecom and insurance company Hikari Tsushin.

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