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The New Daily
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Elaine Lies

Japan’s new gay-rights bill slammed for being too little, too late and far too vague

Japan's gay community is livid the bill was watered down at the last moment. Photo: AP

Japan has enacted a law meant to promote understanding of the LGBTQI community that critics say provides no human rights guarantees, although some conservative MPs say the measure is too permissive.

Japan, the only Group of Seven (G7) nation that does not have legal protection for same-sex unions, had originally pledged to pass the law before hosting a G7 summit last month.

However, wrangling over the bill meant it was only submitted to parliament for consideration on May 18, the day before the summit began.

The initial draft stipulated that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity should “not be tolerated” but was changed to “there should be no unfair discrimination”, which critics say might tacitly encourage some forms of discrimination.

Despite the bill being watered down, some members of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party still broke ranks with party directives, boycotting or walking out of Tuesday’s vote in the lower house and the final vote in the upper house on Friday.

“There have been crimes committed by impersonators in women’s rest rooms,” former upper house president Akiko Santo told reporters after boycotting the vote in that chamber.

‘Normal to accept anything’

“It would be a very serious problem if this bill passed and the trend became that it was normal to accept anything.”

Japan has come under pressure from other G7 nations, especially the United States, to allow same-sex marriage.

Business leaders say they fear Japan will not be able to remain internationally competitive without greater diversity, including representation for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people – especially as Tokyo seeks to promote itself as a global financial centre.

“As a financial institution, in order to achieve sustainable growth, it is essential to create an environment in which people with diverse backgrounds and values can play an active role,” Masahiko Kato, chairman of the Japan Bankers Association and president of Mizuho Bank, told a press conference this week.

Japan’s public broadly supports same-sex marriage, according to opinion polls, while local governments in most of the country allow same-sex partnership agreements that fall short of the rights guaranteed by marriage.

“Some 70 per cent of the nation allows same-sex partnerships, and surveys have found more than 70 per cent of people are in favour of same-sex marriage,” the activist group Marriage for All Japan said in a tweet after the bill passed.

“Even business leaders are on our side.

“Now, parliament and the government must move.”

Kishida in February sacked an aide who had sparked outrage by saying people would flee Japan if same-sex marriage was allowed and that he did not want to live next to LGBTQI couples.

The premier, however, has remained noncommittal on same-sex marriage, saying circumstances in each nation are different and discussion had to proceed “carefully”.

-AAP

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