(NAME-MCE) Princess Aiko takes time off from elementary school after being bullied by classmates

Bill Howe bill at billhowe.org
Fri Mar 5 09:42:04 CST 2010


 Princess Aiko takes time off from elementary school after being bullied by
classmates

JAY ALABASTER

Associated Press Writer

7:37 AM EST, March 5, 2010
TOKYO (AP) — Japan's Princess Aiko, granddaughter of the emperor, has missed
several days of classes because of bullying by boys at her elementary
school, a spokesman for the royal family said Friday.

The news provided a rare glimpse into the private affairs of the world's
oldest hereditary monarchy, which usually abides by strict, formal protocols
and is tightlipped about personal matters.

The 8-year-old princess complained of a stomachache and expressed deep
anxiety and has not attended school since coming home early Tuesday, the
spokesman for the Imperial Household Agency said. He declined to provide his
name, citing agency policy.

An investigation by the agency and the school revealed that she and several
other students had suffered "violent things" from boys in another class, the
spokesman said, declining to elaborate.

The story is likely to shock Japanese. The imperial family is treated with
deep reverence in the country, where Aiko's great-grandfather, Emperor
Hirohito, was worshipped as a living god until Tokyo's defeat in World War
II.

But an official at the elite Gakushuin Primary School in Tokyo's central
Shinjuku district attended by Aiko said the incident may have been a simple
misunderstanding.

"She had decided to leave school, and just as she had returned from changing
into her normal shoes from her school shoes, I hear it was two boys that
approached very suddenly and nearly collided with her, which scared her,"
school director Motomasa Higashisono told reporters.

Japanese schoolchildren often have a separate pair of shoes for school use.

Aiko is the daughter of Crown Prince Naruhito, son of the current emperor,
and Princess Masako. The agency spokesman declined to comment on the
reaction of her parents or when she would return to school.

Naruhito is to visit Africa starting Saturday but won't be accompanied by
Masako, who hasn't attended official duties for several years. She has long
suffered from a nervous disorder attributed to the difficulties of adjusting
to palace life and the pressure to bear a son.

After suffering a miscarriage in 1999, Masako gave birth to Aiko in 2001.
The lack of a male heir fanned a movement to change the law to allow Aiko to
succeed her father.

But Naruhito's younger brother, Prince Akishino, and his wife Princess Kiko
had a baby boy in 2006, who is now third in line to the throne.



Bill Howe
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http://www.apacct.org/

Travel to China and Hong Kong July 10-24, 2010
- http://www.billhowe.org/China2010.htm


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