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Meeja: Geriatric criminal boom in Japan

Geriatric criminal boom in Japan

Crime by elderly Japanese has doubled over the past five years and is likely to keep increasing, posing a serious challenge to one of the world's most rapidly aging societies.

Actually a Chinese man in the US, Lo Pan still gives Japanese elderly folk a bad name.
Actually a Chinese man in the US, Lo Pan still gives Japanese elderly folk a bad name.
November 7, 2008 3:52 PM
by Yoko Nishikawa

TOKYO - Crime by elderly Japanese has doubled over the past five years and is likely to keep increasing, posing a serious challenge to one of the world's most rapidly aging societies, a government report said on Friday.


Factors ranging from lower income and loneliness to an unstable living environment have helped push up crime by those aged 65 or over, and the number of such crimes is growing faster than the elderly population itself, the report added.


"The issue of elderly offenders poses a big problem that our society must be burdened with," the annual report on crime by the justice ministry said.


"As the generation of baby boomers becomes elderly within five years, we are at a stage where we must have a fundamental review on how to prevent crime in a clearly aging society."


Over one-fifth of Japan's population of 128 million is now aged 65 and over, and the figure is expected to double by midcentury.


In 2007, the number of elderly caught committing crimes other than traffic violations totaled 48,605, twice that of five years earlier. Thefts such as shoplifting were the most common offences.


Examples cited by the report included a 76-year-old
woman who started shoplifting several years ago
partly due to loneliness after her parents died. A
76-year-old man caught shoplifting after his release
from prison on parole hoped to return to prison to
have a place to sleep and eat.


The report said preventing repeat offenses was vital
and called for strong cooperation among probation
officers, prisons and welfare organisations.


"Some may use welfare support for gambling, so giving
money is not always a solution. So if the person can
still work, the best thing to do may be to give them
work and have them feel that they can still contribute
to society," said Toru Suzuki, the justice ministry
researcher who compiled the report.


"But nowadays, even young people find it hard to find
jobs, so it is difficult to find them for the elderly," he said,
adding that the government would need to consider
various support programs but there was no panacea to
offer right away.

Reuters




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