Alibi-ya

Type of Japanese business From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An alibi-ya (アリバイ屋, aribai ya) is a business in Japan that creates an identity viewed as socially respectable for peoples involved in occupations that may be viewed as shameful — typically identities for women involved in the sex industry.[1] The fictitious identity is created to conceal the person's actual identity from her family and potential spouses. Services provided by alibi-ya range from simply a phone answering service at a non-existent employer to arrangements for a boss to give a speech at the client's wedding praising her work at the non-existent company.[2] Though the business is not illegal of itself, alibi-ya came to attention in 2011 when fake documents issued by an alibi-ya were used to illegally obtain bank loans.[2][3] In subsequent years, these firms provided customers with fake identities, spurious tax certificates and false documents required to rent apartments or take out personal loans.[4]

Etymology

"Alibi-ya" is a combination of the English world "alibi" and the Japanese "ya", meaning "shop" or "seller".[1] It is also written in Japanese as aribai-gaisha (アリバイ会社), meaning "alibi company".[3]

References

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