Monday. 04.11.2024
JAPAN

Japan's Princess Mako marries a commoner and loses royal status

The muted ceremony took place without any of the traditional celebrations after controversies over financial problems in her boyfriend's family

FILED - Princess Mako of Akishino, the first child and elder daughter of Japanese Crown Prince Fumihito and Princess Kiko, takes part in a commemorative event celebrating 120th anniversary of the start of the Japanese immigration to Peru. Photo: Carlos Garcia Granthon/ZUMA Wire/dpa
Princess Mako of Akishino, the first child and elder daughter of Japanese Crown Prince Fumihito and Princess Kiko. Photo: Carlos Garcia Granthon/dpa.

Japan's Princess Mako has married her non-royal boyfriend Kei Komuro.

The Imperial Household Bureau submitted the necessary documents for the couple to officially register the marriage with the authorities on Tuesday, Japanese media reported.

The muted ceremony took place without any of the traditional celebrations after controversies over money in Komuro's family that have been the subject of extensive reporting in Japan.

With her marriage to Komuro complete, Princess Mako officially leaves Japan's imperial family.

Mako, 30, was originally due to marry her college sweetheart in 2018 but the wedding was delayed due to widespread public criticism over the relationship.

The negative media attention caused Mako to suffer post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), court officials announced shortly before their marriage.

Mako plans to leave Japan to start a new life in the United States, where Komuro works for a law firm.

Komuro, 30, had gone to the US to study law after the already announced wedding to Mako was cancelled in 2018. He recently finished his studies there and passed the bar exam in New York.

Mako is the niece of Japanese Emperor Naruhito.

Accusatory press reports

Under Japanese law, female members of the imperial family lose their royal status if they marry a commoner.

On top of the scandal surrounding Komuro's status as a regular civilian, the media have been obsessed with financial problems in Komuro's family.

There have been accusatory reports for years that Mako's future husband's mother owed money to a man to whom she had once been engaged, although there is disagreement as to whether the money was a gift or a loan.

Many Japanese were outraged by the possibility that the dispute could be settled with Mako's tax-financed royal dowry of 150 million yen (1.3 million dollars).

The princess has since renounced her dowry. Komuro has said that he could use his own money to pay off his mother's debt.

Japan's Princess Mako marries a commoner and loses royal status