QUOTE
The change, which the upper house must approve, applies only to out-of-wedlock children of Japanese fathers and non-Japanese mothers. Under the new law children will be able to claim citizenship for up to 20 years after they’re born; current legislation requires a Japanese father to acknowledge the child while it’s in the womb.
As many as 20,000 children living in Japan may be eligible for citizenship after the change, said Yasuhiro Okuda, a law professor at Chuo University in Tokyo who has followed the case. Still, the legislation enforces the notion that heredity and not birthplace determines Japanese citizenship, he said.
As many as 20,000 children living in Japan may be eligible for citizenship after the change, said Yasuhiro Okuda, a law professor at Chuo University in Tokyo who has followed the case. Still, the legislation enforces the notion that heredity and not birthplace determines Japanese citizenship, he said.