Japan bans child porn possession

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 2014

TOKYO - Japan on Wednesday finally fell into line with other major developed countries and made the possession of child pornography illegal, but the sometimes graphic images of paedophilia in manga comic books remain legal.

The upper house of parliament voted overwhelmingly for a bill revising laws under which only the production and distribution of child pornography had been banned.
The legislation cleared the lower house earlier this month.
Campaigners had long urged Japan to toughen its stance on child pornography, complaining it was a major source of the material for global markets.
The new legislation bans possession of photographs and videos depicting real children aged below 18, but it does not include drawings or digitally-created imagery.
Now anyone who "possesses child pornography for the purpose of satisfying his/her sexual interest" faces imprisonment of up to one year or a fine of up to one million yen ($9,800).
In order to encourage disposal of material, the penalties will be delayed for one year after the revised law comes into effect, which could happen in July.
The new legislation has "an important message" for consumers of child porn, said Hiroshi Nakasatomi, associate professor of law at the University of Tokushima.
"In a sense child porn is supplied because there are buyers. Producers will be dealt a severe blow" with crackdowns on the buying side, he told AFP.
The law will also have an educational effect, showing younger generations what is considered good and bad in society, he said. 
The ban excludes "manga" comics -- those aimed at adults as well as children, "anime" video and computer-generated graphics, following calls to protect freedom of expression.
AFP