Man arrested after swimming moat to enter Japan palace grounds | Inquirer News

Man arrested after swimming moat to enter Japan palace grounds

/ 04:46 PM May 27, 2020

Japan, Imperial Palace

People take pictures of the Imperial Palace, a popular tourist destination, in Tokyo on May 20, 2020. Image: Charly Triballeau/AFP

A Japanese man was arrested in Tokyo on Monday, May 25 after swimming across the Imperial Palace’s moat to scale an outer wall, entering off-limits parts of the grounds, police said.

They said the man appeared to be in his 40s and was arrested mid-morning after emerging on palace grounds shortly before Emperor Naruhito was scheduled to conduct a rice planting ceremony elsewhere on the imperial property.

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No other details were immediately available, including the man’s identity or motive for the incursion.

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A police spokesperson said the incident did not disrupt the rice planting ceremony.

The man is not the first to be arrested for breaching the palace’s defenses.

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In 2013, two men who identified themselves as British tourists were arrested in their underwear after they swam across the moat to the outer walls, according to Kyodo News.

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A year earlier a Japanese man was detained after being discovered inside palace grounds — also in his underwear. He told police he had swum across the moat and wanted to meet the emperor.

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And in 2008, a naked British man was arrested after swimming across the moat and scaling the stone walls in the full view of the public, even tussling with police armed with a stick when they tried to accost him.

The Imperial Palace, in the center of Tokyo, is among Japan’s most popular tourist destinations.

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Parts of the grounds are open to the public, but much of the sprawling property is off-limits, with access carefully controlled and gates and the surrounding moats regularly patrolled by police. NVG

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