Japan Small Teen

Japan Small Teen




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Japan Small Teen
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So-called 'idol' singers, some of whom are aged as young as six, perform in full make-up in front of sleazy male fans
A SIX-year-old girl dances on stage in front of dozens of cheering middle-aged men in a sleazy Tokyo club.
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 that society's sometimes permissive view of the sexualisation of young girls puts minors at risk.
It was only in 2015 that possessing child abuse images was criminalised and authorities are struggling 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.
"(For them) coming to a concert like this and visiting a hostess club in Kabukicho are essentially the same thing," he said, referring to Tokyo's major red-light district.
Idol Tama Himeno, who has performed on stage since the age of 16, says the men attending her shows worship the performers and crave communication with young girls that they cannot get elsewhere.
Most fans are "pure," insists Himeno, now 24, although she admits she was once offered £184 for her used pantyhose.
"Men idolising young girls is relatively accepted in Japan," said Himeno, citing the Tale of Genji, an 11th-century classic depicting a nobleman's romantic relationships with women, as well as a small girl.
For Ai's manager Hidenori Okuma, the men are attracted by the thought of contact with a "girl next door".
"Meeting and chatting with high-school idols has become so popular," said Okuma.
"It's now less embarrassing to admit you like young girls. Now they (male fans) say they prefer primary school girls, without hesitation."
Ai's mother, Mami Yamazaki, says her daughter has wanted to be an idol singer since she watched an anime cartoon about young girls striving for stardom.
“In magazines, children are modelling clothes. What Ai is doing is not much different," she says, despite the audience for idol shows being mainly adult males.
Yamazaki, 26, herself played in a band as a teenager and sees her daughter's performances as a way into the popular and lucrative world of idols.
It can be a pathway to fame, as demonstrated by Japan's AKB48 band, one of the country’s most successful acts, who started in a small stage in Tokyo's Akihabara, with the youngest member aged 11.
But getting a foothold into the idol scene means the child has to interact with adult fans, taking photos together and autographing the backs of their t-shirts.
"It must be a bizarre sight" for foreigners, admits Himeno but she stresses any sexual advances are an absolute "no-no."
Japan's battle against paedophilia is well documented.
The number of minors abused in indecent images has risen five-fold in the past decade, according to official figures.
Police have failed to stamp out so-called JK – meaning Joshi Kosei, or high school girls - businesses, which offer men services like going for a walk with a teen girl so the customers can negotiate for sex.
Quasi-pornographic "chaku-ero", or clothed eroticism - images of small children posing in tiny swimsuits - are easily found on the Internet, slipping through a legal loophole.
Lawyer Keiji Goto, who campaigns for minors' rights, says the problem is a social one.
Many Japanese think that sexually objectifying young girls is not taboo but rather "just falls into a grey zone," said Goto.
Psychiatrist Hiroki Fukui, who also treats paedophiles, says the awareness in Japan that children need to be protected from potential sexual predators is "so low."
He explained: "We need to realise this situation in Japan is not normal."
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In Japan, small children take the subway and run errands alone, no parent in sight. The reason why has more to do with social trust than self-reliance.

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It’s a common sight on Japanese mass transit: children troop through train cars, singly or in small groups, looking for seats.
They wear knee socks, polished patent leather shoes, and plaid jumpers, with wide-brimmed hats fastened under the chin and train passes pinned to their backpacks. The kids are as young as six or seven, on their way to and from school, and there is nary a guardian in sight.

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