Tokyo: Japan’s Emperor Akihito plans to abdicate in favour of his eldest son within a few years, the Japanese media has reported. The 82-year-old monarch has told those close to him that the role should be occupied by someone who can fulfil the Emperor’s duties as stipulated in the Constitution, public broadcaster NHK reported on Tuesday, without citing a source for the information. [caption id=“attachment_2891898” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]  File image of Japan’s Emperor Akihito. AP[/caption] Crown Prince Naruhito and the Emperor’s wife, Empress Michiko, support the wish, the NHK added. Under Japan’s current Imperial Household Law, which governs the status of the Emperor, there is no legal mechanism for abdication. Any move to step down would therefore require a revision of that law. The Kyodo news agency carried a similar report, citing an unnamed government source. No one was immediately available at the Imperial Household Agency for comment. Japan, which claims to have one of the world’s oldest monarchies, has not seen an imperial abdication from the Chrysanthemum Throne in 200 years, NHK said. Akihito’s role is strictly limited to one of “symbol of the state” under a Constitution imposed by the United States in the aftermath of World War II. His father Hirohito, in whose name the military conquests of the 20th century were prosecuted, was treated as a living god in Japan until defeat in 1945.
Japan’s Emperor Akihito plans to abdicate in favour of his eldest son within a few years, the Japanese media has reported
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