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Japan
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‘Male fans prefer primary school girls’: how Japan walks a fine line when it comes to sexualising children

Japan’s battle against paedophilia is well documented and the number of minors abused in child pornography has risen five-fold in the past decade, according to official figures

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Adults watch a concert by an idol group in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

In a cramped and dark venue in a sleazy Tokyo district, dozens of middle-aged men cheer at a performer on stage: the object of their adoration is a six-year-old girl.

Decked out in make-up with ribbons in her hair, Ai is dressed like an adult, but still looks very much a child.

She is a so-called “idol” singer – common in Japan, where rights groups have complained society’s sometimes permissive view of the sexualisation of young girls puts minors at risk.

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It was only in 2015 that possessing child pornography was criminalised and authorities have struggled to bring the country into line with other advanced nations on the issue.

In the crowd at an idols show, Soichiro Seki, 40, says he watches young girls on stage twice a week. He insists he goes just to encourage the performers and feels no shame. But he did concede that other fans objectify them.

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A male fan at a concert by an idol group in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
A male fan at a concert by an idol group in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
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