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Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Anything for love! Japan's Princess Mako to give up royal status to marry commoner classmate

IANS|
May 17, 2017, 06.13 PM IST

Princess Mako (R) is likely to marry Komuro in 2018.
TOKYO: Japanese Princess Mako, the eldest granddaughter of Emperor Akihito, is set to marry a former college classmate, a local media report said. 

Public broadcaster NHK reported on Tuesday Princess Mako's engagement with her university classmate Kei Komuro will become official with an exchange of ceremonial gifts, after which a date will be set for the wedding. 

Mako is likely to marry Komuro in 2018, the report said. 

The couple met five years ago during an event at a restaurant in Tokyo, NHK reported. 

Komuro proposed to the 25-year-old princess about a year after they met and Mako's parents have already approved of the relationship. 

The princess is working as a researcher at a museum in Tokyo while Komuro, a resident of the Yokohama locality, is a legal assistant at a law office, and is also pursuing a Master's in business law. 

Komuro also worked as "Prince of the Sea" to promote tourism to the beaches of Shonan in Kanagawa prefecture, the report said. 

Mako is the elder daughter of Prince Akishino, the second son of the emperor and second in line to the Chrysanthemum Throne after Prince Naruhito. 
Anything for love! Japan's Princess Mako to give up royal status to marry commoner classmate

Japanese Emperor Akihito (seated 3rd L) and Empress Michiko (seated 4th L) with Crown Prince Naruhito (seated 2nd L), his wife, Crown Princess Masako (Seated L), their daughter, Princess Aiko (top 2nd L), Prince Akishino, (Seated 2nd R), his wife, Princess Kiko (Seated R), their daughters, Princess Mako (top L), and Princess Kako (top R), and their son, Prince Hisahito (top 2nd R). (Image: Reuters) 

Mako's marriage will further shrink Japan's imperial family, an aged and dwindling institution, which is heading towards a huge generational gap, Efe news reported. 

The marriage could also reopen the debate on the law that has been governing the royal household since 1947, and that doesn't recognise the so-called collateral institutional branches, making women who marry out of royalty to lose their royal status. 

The world's oldest reigning hereditary dynasty comprises 19 members, of whom only four are men, making them the only ones who can accede to the throne: Emperor Akihito (83), Prince Naruhito (57), Prince Akishino (51) and Prince Hisahito (10), younger brother of Princess Mako. 

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