Elderly Japanese Voluntarily Go to Prison: CNN Explains the Trend.
20.01.2025
3115

Journalist
Shostal Oleksandr
20.01.2025
3115

Elderly Japanese Prisoners Voluntarily in Prisons
In Japan, elderly people are voluntarily choosing prison to secure their livelihood. According to CNN, a women's prison in Japan is primarily filled with retirees. Advocates claim that loneliness has become such a significant problem for prisoners that they choose to remain behind bars.
There are even people who say they are willing to pay 20,000 or 30,000 (5404-8106 UAH) yen a month (if they can) to live here permanently, said Tochigi women's prison employee Takeji Shiralaga.
Inmates are provided with regular meals, free medical care, attention, and communication, which they lack in freedom.
There are very good people in this prison. Perhaps this life is the most stable for me, admitted an 81-year-old felon serving Time for food theft.
It is also noted that 20% of Japanese people aged 65 and older live in poverty.
There are people who come here because it's cold or because they are hungry. They can receive free medical care while in prison, but after release, they will have to pay for it themselves, so some people want to stay here as long as possible, said an employee.
Additionally, Tokyo authorities plan to introduce a four-day workweek for civil servants to increase the birth rate.
Read also
- Horrific accident in Khmelnytskyi: a teenager and a man died, three others injured
- Trump has found a buyer for TikTok, but approval from China is needed
- With the Russian offensive in Sumy region, a construction project worth over 60 million UAH has begun
- Duda's bodyguard arrived in Ukraine with an ambiguous patch and sparked a discussion online
- In Tanzania, 38 people died in a car accident
- Czech intelligence saved Taiwan's vice president from a planned assassination by the Chinese