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http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/afp/080111/technology/lifestyle_japan_it_in

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Cellphone obsession leads Japanese children into a 'scary world'

Fri Jan 11, 12:49 PM

TOKYO (AFP) - Young Japanese people are evolving a new lifestyle for

the 21st century based on the cellphones that few are now able to

live without.

While about one-third of Japanese primary school students aged 7-12

years old use cellphones, by the time they get to high school that

figure has shot up to 96 percent, according to a government survey

released last month.

They are using their phones to read books, listen to music, chat with

friends and surf the Internet -- an average of 124 minutes a day for

high school girls and 92 minutes for boys.

While the wired world they now inhabit holds enormous advantages for

learning and communicating, it also brings a downside, say experts

who point to a rise in cyberbullying and a growing inability among

teenagers to deal with other people face to face.

" Kids say what's most important to them, next to their own lives, is

their cellphone, " said Masashi Yasukawa, head of the private National

Web Counselling Council.

" They are moving their thumbs while eating or watching television, "

he said.

The passion in 20-year-old Ayumi Chiba's voice backs up this

assertion.

" My life is impossible without it, " she says of her cellphone. " I

used to pretend I was sick and leave school early when I forgot to

take it with me. "

Hideki Nakagawa, a sociology professor at Nihon University in Tokyo,

said cellphones have become " an obsession " for youngsters.

" They feel insecure without cellphones, just the way sales people do

without their name cards, " he said.

As the multi-faceted cellphone takes centre stage in teen life, it

plays a number of roles -- including a weapon that children can wield

against each other with no thought for the consequences.

Yasukawa recalls the case of a 15-year-old girl who regularly

received messages telling her: " Die, " " You're a nuisance " and " You

smell " .

They turned out to have been sent by a friend in whom she had

confided and who told her not to take the messages too seriously.

" The girl who was doing the bullying confessed it made her feel good

to see the unease spreading on her friend's face, " Yasukawa said.

" Some children send nasty messages to a 'friend' while in her

company, pretending to be looking at her profile page on the

cellphone.

" It's a very scary world, " he said. " Parents don't know there's a

very scary world behind cellphone screens. "

As they reveal personal information about themselves, children can

become prey for fraudsters and paedophiles, as only about one percent

have blocks on potentially harmful material.

But on protected sites such as school bulletin boards that do block

adults, bullies are free to anonymously post comments without any

teacher oversight or intervention.

" Bully-to-bullied relations can be easily reversed with a targeted

kid pointing the finger at somebody else for some trivial thing, "

Yasukawa said, adding that this potentially created " a survival game

among children " .

Japan's largest mobile carrier NTT DoCoMo Inc. in December launched a

line of cellphones for small children, with software ranging from

picture books to school scheduling pads aimed at helping them to

learn.

The cellphones will eventually become their main means of

communication.

Education professor Tetsuro Saito said a survey of 1,600 middle

school students aged around 14 found about 60 percent carried

cellphones and nearly half used them to send 20 or more emails a day.

Most middle school cellphone users rarely used their phone to talk,

the survey found. Saito, of Kawamura Gakuen Women's University near

Tokyo, said children seemed to want the security of communicating

with someone, without the bother of dealing with a real person.

" Communication ability is bound to decline as cellphones and other

devices are now getting between people, " he said.

Tomomi, 18, who would not give her full name, said: " I send some 20

emails a day. There are people I don't talk with -- even if I see

them at school, I just exchange mail with them. I guess we're

connected only by a machine. "

Saito's survey found that students can also use their cellphones as

an emotional crutch, and the more problems they have at home, the

more dependent they seem to become on their phones.

More than 60 percent of students who said they do not enjoy being

with their families send 20 or more emails a day, compared with 35

percent of those happy with their families.

And even if cellphones can bring solace, it can come at a terrible

cost.

Kanae Yokoyama, 36, is facing trial for beating and spraining the

neck of her 15-year-old daughter after catching her secretly using

her cellphone in November.

The girl had been prohibited from using her phone as the bill had hit

120,000 yen (1,060 dollars) in October, mostly wracked up by

downloading music and playing games, according to local police.

They said the mother had a history of abusing her daughter.

" Considering she was often absent from school, the mobile phone may

have been her sole 'friend' to spend her days with, " a police

official said.

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