After
years of criticism for being a ‘black hole’ of parental kidnapping and
increasingly public diplomatic pressure, Japan is finally a party to the Hague
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. But will it
make any difference?
In the late 19th century Japan had to
deal with other treaties: the ‘unequal treaties’ imposed on it by Western
powers, which rendered foreigners immune from Japanese law and court
jurisdiction and infringed national sovereignty. Renegotiating these treaties
involved a crash program of adopting laws and institutions copied from western
models. Appearing to be a country with ‘civilized’ (Western-style) legal
institutions was critical to being treated equally by the West. What these new
laws and institutions meant for the Japanese people was sometimes an
afterthought; the resulting gap between the formal legal system and how it
actually works in practice remains one of the interesting facets of Japanese
law.
Thus, it remains to be seen whether
Japan will go beyond just appearing to have joined the Hague Convention.
A common misconception about the
Convention is that joining it is a requirement for having abducted children
returned. This is untrue: children were being returned to Japan from the
United States, Canada, England and other signatory nations before Tokyo ever
inked the treaty. Other than establishing an expedited process and basic
guiding principles, the Convention does not magically give judges any new
powers. Furthermore, given the Convention principle that it is in the best
interests of children to be returned to their jurisdiction of habitual
residence, there is no logical reason to let a child remain just because they
originated from a country that has not signed the treaty.
With Japan, the real issue has always
been one of the willingness and ability of its judges to do more than simply
ratify whatever status quo happens to apply to a child when the case comes into
court. Japanese family courts in particular have few coercive powers to bring
about the return of a child even in domestic cases. But civil enforcement is
only part of the picture.
Arrest or the threat thereof can be a
powerful tool for remedying abduction. Yet in the past Japanese law enforcement
has used what appear to be highly situational interpretations of the criminal
law. When a Japanese mother unilaterally brought a child to Japan (even in
violation of a foreign court order), police would decline to act, declaring
that it is not a crime, not ‘abduction’ when a parent does such things. Yet
foreign fathers trying to take children out of Japan have been arrested for
just that — child abduction. This apparent double standard has exacerbated
perceptions of a lack of will on the part of Japan’s legal system to deal with
the problem.
Based on the massive statute the Diet
passed to establish a whole new procedural regime just for cases under the
Convention, there certainly appears to be a willingness to address the
problem, or at least the foreign criticism it has engendered. Yet it is still
up to Japan’s highly bureaucratic courts to actually order returns, or avail
themselves of the broadly defined exceptions contained in the implementing
legislation. Japanese court enforcement officers have already caucused and
declared it unlikely that return orders can be directly enforced against a
child who refuses to cooperate.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Japan’s central authority for handling cases under the Convention, is
establishing a mediation system for such cases in the hope that many can be
resolved amicably. Of course, this is an admirable goal but if executed poorly
could result in a lot of well-intentioned talking without concrete results.
International child abductions often involve tremendous anger and loss of
trust, meaning it may be unrealistic to expect amicable resolutions in many
cases.
Now that Japan has joined the
Convention, it will be interesting to see how Japan’s courts measure up to
expectations. Foreign diplomats, parents and other observers who have been
following the abduction problem in Japan doubtless expect that, as a treaty
signatory, Japan’s courts will start to generate different results than they
have in the past and order returns.
Having joined the Convention primarily
as the result of foreign pressure, rather than homegrown acceptance of its
underlying principles, Japan’s leaders for their part may expect recognition of
the significant effort involved in doing so, regardless of what happens in its
courts.
Colin P.A. Jones is a Professor at the Doshisha Law School, Doshisha University,
Kyoto. The author is registered as a mediator candidate with one of the dispute
resolution centres in this system.
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