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| While the global #MeToo movement against sexual abuse has stormed through everything from Hollywood to the Italian opera, it has struggled to take off in Japan (AFP Photo/CHARLY TRIBALLEAU) |
Tokyo (AFP) - Women's rights protesters are taking to the streets for the sixth time in as many months as anger mounts in Japan over 'outdated' rape laws, after a man was allowed to walk free despite sexually assaulting his daughter for years.
A court
ruled the father had sexually abused his child from around the age 13 to 19 and
even acknowledged he was violent when she resisted, but he was acquitted
because the law requires prosecutors to prove there was overwhelming force, a
threat, or that the victim was completely incapacitated.
The verdict
is being appealed, but it has sparked outrage with hundreds again expected to
demonstrate in cities across the nation Wednesday, while an online petition
demanding that any sex without consent be defined as rape -- signed by more
than 47,000 people -- has been submitted to the justice ministry.
For Jun
Yamamoto, who was abused by her father between the ages of 13 and 20, the story
is sickeningly familiar.
"Again!...
That was what I thought," the 45-year-old said, adding: "Japanese
justice does not recognise sexual offences like this as a crime. I cannot
tolerate it anymore."
The court
acknowledged in the latest incest case that the girl had been forced to have
intercourse "against her will" and was psychologically subjugated by
her father because of the repeated abuse.
But it said
it was unclear whether she was "incapable of resisting", so her
father was acquitted of rape.
![]() |
An online
petition demanding that any sex without consent be defined as rape
-- signed by
more than 47,000 people -- has been submitted to the justice
ministry in Japan
(AFP Photo/CHARLY TRIBALLEAU)
|
No
protection
Yamamoto, a
nurse who also works for the rights of sexual abuse victims, is demanding
reforms to the Japanese criminal code.
"When
caught off guard or attacked by somebody who should be someone you can trust,
you freeze in shock and cannot fight back," Yamamoto told AFP.
"Even
in a case where a father raped his daughter, the court says she could have
resisted and lets him go. This legal situation is really a serious
problem," she said, her voice quivering with barely suppressed anger.
While the
global #MeToo movement against sexual abuse has stormed through everything from
Hollywood to the Italian opera, it has struggled to take off in Japan.
But calls
to protect sex abuse victims seem to be winning support, with hundreds expected
to rally holding symbolic flowers in 20 cities nationwide on Wednesday.
In one past
"Flower Demo" in Tokyo, advocates held banners reading: "Law
MUST protect victims, NOT perpetrators"
"Why
do we have to ask for this over and over again?" said a tearful protester
on mic. "Are we asking for something so inconceivable?"
Activists
and lawyers warn that Japan's criminal code, which dates back over a century,
is incapable of protecting sexual abuse victims.
"When
the criminal code was created in 1907, Japan was purely patriarchal,"
lawyer Yukiko Tsunoda explained.
"The
purpose of criminalising rape was to assure a wife would bear a child only by
her husband and never be accessed by other men... It was a law of chastity
which would only benefit a husband or the father of a family," she added.
"Who
wants to protect a woman who so easily lets a rapist do his thing just after a
few punches? That was the thinking."
Many
activists see the law as part of a broader gender problem in Japan, which,
despite relatively high rates of female education and workplace participation,
remains unequal in many ways.
![]() |
While the
global #MeToo movement against sexual abuse has stormed through
everything from
Hollywood to the Italian opera, it has struggled to take off
in Japan (AFP
Photo/CHARLY TRIBALLEAU)
|
Tsunoda
said that sexist norms remain embedded in the legal system and systematically
undermine women's rights, which according to her explains why Japan is ranked
110th out of 149 countries in the World Economic Forum's latest gender gap
report.
Unsafe
for women?
In 2017,
Japan revised the criminal code on sexual offences for the first time in 110
years, recognising male victims, and increasing the punishment for rape from a
minimum of three years to five.
But the
requirement that a victim be able to prove they could not resist assault
remained unchanged.
Tsunoda
served on a justice ministry panel considering the reforms and urged the
requirement be changed, but a majority disagreed, arguing that it could lead to
innocent victims being convicted based on the "subjective" views of
alleged victims.
A review
will happen next year, but it is unclear whether the controversial rule will be
up for discussion.
Yamamoto
and fellow rights campaigners are hopeful the voices of tens of thousands of
citizens who signed the petition will force legislators to reconsider.
"The
petition to remove the requirements seems to be the most supported among the
opinions we've received," a justice ministry official told AFP, adding:
"We take it very seriously."
But until
changes are made protestors say they will continue to rally across the country
on the 11th of each month.
Demonstrator
Wakana Goto, 28, told protestors at one rally: "In Japan, with its
reputation as one of the world's safest countries, I have been exposed to
sexual harassment since the age of three, forced to get used to it and to learn
to deal with it."



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