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Japan’s low-crime image dented as car thefts, home break-ins rise
The Straits Times
|December 09, 2025
At a seminar in May on car theft held by the Aichi prefectural police in central Japan, a man in his 50s listened intently - he was twice targeted in the past.
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A woman walking alone in a restaurant area near Tokyo's Shimbashi district at dusk. Japan has often prided itself on its low-crime society, but that has been marred by rising car thefts and home intrusions.
(PHOTO: AFP)
When he woke up one morning in 201, his prized Toyota Land Cruiser had vanished. Then, one night in 2015, he found a bicycle blocking his entrance, making it difficult to open the door. His car was still there, but a large square hole had been made in the body. The internal wiring had been burned out, which cost more than 100,000 yen (S$830) to repair.
According to provisional data from the National Police Agency, the number of car thefts from January to June 2025 reached 3,821, up 29.2 per cent from a year earlier.
Aichi prefecture, the heartland of Toyota Motor, recorded the highest figure with 639 cases, a 50.4 per cent increase from the same period in 2024. Saitama, near Tokyo, with 479 cases was up 14.6 per cent, and Kanagawa with 396 cases was up 66.4 per cent.
This story is from the December 09, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.
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