It’s a boy for 1st Japan Cabinet member on paternity leave
TOKYO — Japan’s environment minister became father to a boy and is going ahead with his planned paternity leave — still a rarity in Japan where men are under pressure to put work before family.
Shinjiro Koizumi said his wife, former newscaster Christel Takigawa, gave birth to their first child late Thursday, just two days after he announced he was taking two weeks off over the next three months.
“It has already started,” he said, noting that he had left his office early on Thursday so he could be present during his wife’s delivery.
Koizumi is the first Cabinet minister to take paternity leave, hoping to get more working fathers to follow his example. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government has adopted a policy to free up time for mothers and get more of them back into Japan’s shrinking workforce in a fast-aging nation where the birthrate dwindles and the population declines.