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This Week in AsiaPeople

Naked intruder exposes gaps in Japan’s royal security: ‘enormous failure’

Princess Kako reportedly witnessed the chaos firsthand as a shrieking intruder stripped off and scaled a barrier below the royal balcony

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(From left) Japan’s Crown Prince Akishino, Crown Princess Kiko, Princess Kako, Prince Hisahito, Princess Nobuko and Princess Akiko attend the traditional new year’s greeting ceremony at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo on January 2. Photo: AFP
Julian Ryall
A bizarre, previously unreported incident involving a naked man at Japan’s Imperial Palace during a new year’s celebration has raised questions about the emperor’s security as the royal household prepares for his birthday audience on Monday.

The breach occurred on January 2 but only came to light this week, when the magazine News Post Seven published an account of the episode. An official from the Imperial Household Agency confirmed to This Week in Asia that a security incident had taken place at the annual ceremony, but declined to provide further details.

The magazine quoted agency sources as saying security had since been tightened around the imperial family ahead of Monday’s appearance.

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“Japan is generally seen as a very safe country, so this has to be seen as a pretty shocking breach of security around someone as important as the emperor,” said Robert Dujarric, co-director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University’s Tokyo campus.

The imperial family is always well protected, so a breach like this is an enormous failure
Robert Dujarric, political scientist

“The imperial family is always well protected, so a breach like this is an enormous failure and we can only be thankful that this person was not armed.”

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