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Japan boyband agency apologises over sex abuse allegations

Japan's top boyband agency has issued an apology over sexual assault allegations against its late founder Johnny Kitagawa, with fans demanding Monday that the firm "fully investigate" the matter.

Japanese-Brazilian singer Kauan Okamoto, a former member of Japanese idol group Johnny’s Junior, answers questions during a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan in Tokyo on April 12, 2023. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)

Japan’s top boyband agency has issued an apology over sexual assault allegations against its late founder Johnny Kitagawa, with fans demanding Monday that the firm “fully investigate” the matter.

Last month, Japanese-Brazilian singer Kauan Okamoto said he was repeatedly molested by Kitagawa, who established the entertainment empire Johnny and Associates.

Okamoto alleged that Kitagawa, who died of a stroke aged 87 in 2019, assaulted him during his four-year stint with the agency until 2016, starting when he was 15 years old.

He is one of the few to publicly address the star-maker’s long-alleged history of sexual abuse against young boys, a controversy that resurfaced after a recent BBC documentary.

Kitagawa was never criminally charged over the accusations.

Julie Fujishima, Kitagawa’s niece and the current president of Johnny and Associates, addressed the matter in a video and written statement published Sunday evening.

In the video, she apologised “sincerely” for trouble caused in connection to the allegations, and to the accusers.

“Obviously, we do not believe there was no problem. As a business and as an individual, I absolutely do not tolerate these acts,” her written statement said, referring to the documentary and Okamoto’s testimony.

“On the other hand, it is not easy for us to simply declare by ourselves whether individual allegations can be recognised as facts or not, when we cannot confirm with the individual directly concerned, Johnny Kitagawa,” she wrote.

“This is not the kind of occasion where you can be forgiven by saying ‘I did not know’. But the truth is that I did not,” added Fujishima, a long-term executive at the agency.

A fan group called Penlight said Monday that the company’s decision to issue online statements, rather than holding a press conference, had left many questions unanswered.

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