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Japan's Princess Kiko has boy
Tokyo -
Japan's Princess Kiko has given birth to a son, likely postponing a
long-running debate over whether Japanese law should be changed to
allow women to succeed to the throne, the imperial palace announced
Wednesday.
The boy is third in line to the
throne, after Crown Prince Naruhito and Kiko's husband, Prince
Akishino.
The Imperial Household Agency gave
few details about the birth, which came by Caesarean section following
pregnancy complications, and did not release the boy's name.
The agency said only that the baby
was healthy and that he weighed about 2,558 grams (5.6 pounds).
Naruhito
is the eldest son of Emperor Akihito.
Naruhito
and his wife, Crown Princess Masako, earlier had a daughter, Princess
Aiko, sparking the succession debate.
Many in Japan have thought that the
birth of a boy to Kiko, who has two daughters, would take some of the
pressure off Masako, who has struggled with depression -- and, at 42,
is thought to have a slim chance of bearing more children.
Others, however, maintained that the
succession law should be changed to allow Aiko to inherit the throne.
When the government previously
proposed changing the law, polls showed that an estimated 70 percent
of Japanese approved. Once Kiko's pregnancy was announced, however,
public opinion switched, with Japanese saying it would be easier for
Kiko to bear a son and resolve the succession issue for now.
The birth was cause for rejoicing in
Japan, and media outlets broadcast continuing coverage about the
event.
Kiko
was hospitalized on August 16 after showing symptoms of partial
placenta previa, in which part of the placenta drops too low in the
uterus, The Associated Press reported.
The gender of the baby had been a
closely guarded palace secret, though Japanese tabloids speculated the
child would be a boy.
The last potential male heir born was
Akishino himself, in 1965.
Reigning empresses have been rare in
Japan, usually serving as stand-ins for a few years until a suitable
male could be installed. The last reigning empress was Gosakuramachi,
who assumed the throne in 1763, according to AP.
Debate over the succession law was
divisive and emotional. Some conservatives proposed a revival of
concubines to produce imperial heirs, and others argued that allowing
a woman on the throne would destroy a precious Japanese tradition. --
CNN News
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