Japan's Only Young Imperial Heir Turns 18

In this handout photo taken on July 15, 2024 and released by the Imperial Household Agency of Japan on September 6, Japan's Prince Hisahito is pictured at a garden of the Akasaka imperial property residence in Tokyo. Prince Hisahito celebrates his 18th birthday on September 6. (Photo by Handout / IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD AGENCY OF JAPAN / AFP)
In this handout photo taken on July 15, 2024 and released by the Imperial Household Agency of Japan on September 6, Japan's Prince Hisahito is pictured at a garden of the Akasaka imperial property residence in Tokyo. Prince Hisahito celebrates his 18th birthday on September 6. (Photo by Handout / IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD AGENCY OF JAPAN / AFP)
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Japan's Only Young Imperial Heir Turns 18

In this handout photo taken on July 15, 2024 and released by the Imperial Household Agency of Japan on September 6, Japan's Prince Hisahito is pictured at a garden of the Akasaka imperial property residence in Tokyo. Prince Hisahito celebrates his 18th birthday on September 6. (Photo by Handout / IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD AGENCY OF JAPAN / AFP)
In this handout photo taken on July 15, 2024 and released by the Imperial Household Agency of Japan on September 6, Japan's Prince Hisahito is pictured at a garden of the Akasaka imperial property residence in Tokyo. Prince Hisahito celebrates his 18th birthday on September 6. (Photo by Handout / IMPERIAL HOUSEHOLD AGENCY OF JAPAN / AFP)

Japan got a new highly eligible bachelor on Friday as Prince Hisahito, the imperial family's last hope for long-term survival unless the rules are changed to allow female succession, turned 18.

Although his formal coming-of-age ceremony has been pushed back to at least 2025 so he can finish school, according to the Imperial Household Agency, they released a video of him strolling in woods, saying he is "extremely interested" in natural history.

"I hope to learn more through each and every experience, absorbing various aspects and growing through them," the prince was quoted as saying.

Hisahito is the only son of Crown Prince Akishino, 58, and Crown Princess Kiko, 57, and is second-in-line to succeed his uncle Emperor Naruhito, 64, Agence France Presse reported.

Naruhito has a daughter, Aiko, 22, but she cannot succeed her father under the Imperial Household Law, in place since 1947, because of her gender.

Royal women must also leave the family when they wed a commoner -- as in 2021, when former princess Mako, Hisahito's other sister, married her university sweetheart.

The same rule does not apply to male members of the family, however, with Naruhito's father Akihito, 90, having wed Michiko, 89, the daughter of a flour magnate whom he met on a tennis court in 1959.

The imperial family, whose history according to legend goes back 2,600 years, formally renounced its divine status after Japan's defeat in World War II and it has no political power.

Akihito, who abdicated in 2019 due to his age and poor health, is credited with modernizing the institution.

The Imperial Household Agency opened its first Instagram account in April, but many of the photos are formally staged, only showing the activities of the current emperor, his wife, and daughter.

Lawmakers in May began discussing possible relaxations to the strict succession rules, and a recent Kyodo News poll found 90 percent public support for female succession.

But resistance among conservative MPs, who revere the royals as the perfect example of a patriarchal Japanese family, makes that change unlikely any time soon.

Aside from Prince Hisahito and his father, the only other heir to the Chrysanthemum Throne is the emperor's childless uncle Prince Hitachi, 88.



Chinese Cities Suspend Schools, Cancel Flights ahead of Super Typhoon Yagi

A man looks up on a promenade at Victoria harbor in Hong Kong on September 5, 2024, as super typhoon Yagi tracked across the South China Sea towards the southern China coast. (Photo by Dale DE LA REY / AFP)
A man looks up on a promenade at Victoria harbor in Hong Kong on September 5, 2024, as super typhoon Yagi tracked across the South China Sea towards the southern China coast. (Photo by Dale DE LA REY / AFP)
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Chinese Cities Suspend Schools, Cancel Flights ahead of Super Typhoon Yagi

A man looks up on a promenade at Victoria harbor in Hong Kong on September 5, 2024, as super typhoon Yagi tracked across the South China Sea towards the southern China coast. (Photo by Dale DE LA REY / AFP)
A man looks up on a promenade at Victoria harbor in Hong Kong on September 5, 2024, as super typhoon Yagi tracked across the South China Sea towards the southern China coast. (Photo by Dale DE LA REY / AFP)

Cities in southern China suspended schools and canceled some flights on Thursday, as tropical storm Yagi strengthened into a super typhoon and barreled straight for the holiday island province of Hainan.
Yagi triggered floods and landslides on the main Philippine island of Luzon this week, leaving at least 13 dead, according to official figures.
The tropical storm intensified into a super typhoon as it tracked west across the South China Sea, China's Xinhua news agency said, packing winds of up to 209 kilometers (130 miles) per hour as it headed for Hainan.
"Hainan upgraded its emergency response to Yagi to the highest level at 11:30 am Thursday, according to the provincial disaster management authority," Xinhua said.
The typhoon is expected to make landfall on Friday afternoon in either Hainan or neighboring Guangdong, AFP said.
Work, school and local transport services were suspended from Thursday noon (0400 GMT) in Haikou, Hainan's capital.
In Hong Kong, which Yagi is expected to bypass, the weather observatory said it will issue the city's third-highest typhoon warning at 6:20 pm (1020 GMT), limiting public transport across the finance hub.
Classes at kindergarten and special schools in Hong Kong were suspended Thursday, while budget airline Hong Kong Express said six flights have been rescheduled.
Greater Bay Airlines said they would cancel four flights and reschedule two more due to the weather.
"Yagi will remain at super typhoon intensity and skirt around 300 kilometers (186 miles) to the southwest of Hong Kong tomorrow morning," the observatory said.
"Gale winds associated with Yagi are expected to affect the vicinity of the Pearl River Estuary tonight and tomorrow morning."
After southern China, Yagi will move towards Vietnam, on course to hit the northern and north-central regions around the famed UNESCO heritage site Halong Bay.
Vietnam's meteorological agency issued a storm warning on Thursday, and the government mobilized more than 2,700 military personnel for storm response.
Coastal provinces are planning a sailing ban on Friday, while Vietnam's mountainous provinces were ordered to prepare rescue vehicles.