The Borneo Post

Thai teenager born and raised in Japan loses deportatio­n appeal

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TOKYO: A Thai teenager born and raised in Japan lost an appeal yesterday against a lower court ruling that upheld his deportatio­n order, highlighti­ng the country’s deep reluctance to accept foreigners even as its population ages and shrinks.

The Tokyo High Court ruled that Utinan Won, a 16-year- old high school student living without a visa, should leave Japan. Won’s mother had already left Japan after lower court judges said her son could win residency if she returned to Thailand.

“Of course I want to stay in Japan,” Won told reporters after the ruling. “I’d waited so long for this decision. I’m so sad and pained that it was made so quickly.”

The High Court judges made their ruling in little more than 10 seconds, with cries of “Why?” and “Terrible” coming from a packed public gallery.

Won’s case has drawn sharp focus on the plight of hundreds of children who, like him, live on “provisiona­l release” - a status that allows those without visas to stay in Japan while banning them from working and travelling freely.

Last month, Reuters exposed the agonising pathway to residency offered by the Japanese immigratio­n authoritie­s and courts to some families living on provisiona­l release: Children can stay in Japan legally if their parents return to their country of origin.

Tokyo District Court judges said in June Won could win a special residence permit if his mother - who at the time was also on provisiona­l release - left Japan, and if he found another guardian.

Won’s mother, Lonsan Phaphakdee, returned to Bangkok in September to give her son a chance to continue life in the only country he has known. Won now lives with a Japanese man who has been supporting the family.

The High Court judges said in a written ruling: “We must say that the ( lower court’s) decision and the deportatio­n order are legally legitimate.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Utinan Won
Utinan Won

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