You are here:
  1. asahi.com
  2. News
  3. English
  4. Nation
  5.  article

Former Chinese husband found guilty of abducting daughters

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN

2009/12/4

Print

Share Article このエントリをはてなブックマークに追加 Yahoo!ブックマークに登録 このエントリをdel.icio.usに登録 このエントリをlivedoorクリップに登録 このエントリをBuzzurlに登録

In another case highlighting legal complexities if international marriages fall apart, a court found a Chinese man guilty of "abducting and taking overseas" his two daughters from their Japanese mother 10 years ago.

The Tachikawa branch of the Tokyo District Court sentenced Qin Weijie, 55, to two years in prison, suspended for three years, on Thursday.

According to the ruling, Qin and his Japanese wife were undergoing divorce procedures in June 1999, when he talked to their daughters, then 7 and 8, on a street in Akishima in western Tokyo. He took them on a flight to Hong Kong from Kansai Airport. The girls had been living with their mother at the time.

When the divorce was finalized, a Japanese court gave the mother sole custody of the children.

But Qin refused to hand over the daughters.

"(The defendant) disrespected the law, and his behavior was malicious. The circumstances after his criminal act were not good, either," Presiding Judge Manabu Kato said.

According to Qin's 44-year-old former wife, she was staying at a shelter with the two girls in 1999 to escape Qin's physical abuse. She said she spent the next 10 years searching for her children, fearing that they may be abused.

But the presiding judge said the daughters "grew up with a proper amount of love." He also noted that the younger daughter chose to live with her father in China, even after returning to Japan temporarily earlier this year.

After the ruling, Qin said: "In Shanghai, not only my second daughter but also my 1-year-old son from my remarriage are waiting. I'd like to go home soon and fulfill my duty as their father."

He had told the court that he took the girls to China for their own sake because "their life was unstable" in Japan at the time.

Prosecutors had demanded a three-year prison term for Qin.

When the daughters returned to Japan in January to renew their passports, the second daughter returned to China on her own will, but the elder daughter decided to stay with her mother.

Qin was arrested in September when he entered Japan for the purpose of getting the older daughter back.

According to the mother, the older daughter broke down in tears when she passed by the site where she was taken away 10 years ago. The girl is also being treated for an eating disorder, the mother said.

"My daughter is afraid of my ex-husband, and she is emotionally hurt. How can we get back the lost 10 years?" the mother said.

Disappointed with the suspended sentence, the mother urged the Japanese government to sign the Hague Convention on international child abduction and adopt measures to protect mothers and children who have escaped from abuse.

Under the convention, when a child has been taken from his or her country of residence, the child must be returned to that country.

Neither Japan nor China is party to the Hague Convention.

In recent months, cases of legal problems have surfaced concerning divorced Japanese women bringing their children to Japan without the consent of their former husbands overseas.

When the mother reported the abduction to police, she was told there was nothing they could do.

After she obtained legal custody, she asked the Foreign Ministry, the Chinese government, Diet members and lawyers for support. She even traveled to China several times but could not get her daughters back, she said.

In 2004, Tokyo police finally accepted her criminal complaint against Qin.

According to the welfare ministry, there were 37,000 international marriages in Japan last year, as well as 19,000 divorces among international couples.(IHT/Asahi: December 4,2009)

検索フォーム


朝日新聞購読のご案内

Advertise

The Asahi Shimbun Asia Network
  • Up-to-date columns and reports on pressing issues indispensable for mutual understanding in Asia. [More Information]
  • Why don't you take pen in hand and send us a haiku or two. Haiku expert David McMurray will evaluate your submission. [More Information]