After sexual harassment row, a #MeToo moment for Japan?

By AFP   April 19, 2018 | 10:09 pm PT
After sexual harassment row, a #MeToo moment for Japan?
Japan's Administrative Vice Finance Minister Junichi Fukuda leaves the finance ministry in Tokyo on April 16, 2018. Photo by AFP
Activists say the country is ripe for change, with just 2.8 percent of rape victims reporting their assault.

A firestorm in Japan over allegations of sexual harassment by the top finance ministry official is raising the possibility that the country could finally be having its "#MeToo moment."

The international movement against sexual assault and harassment has brought down movie moguls, media stars and political figures across the world, even in patriarchal East Asia.

In China, the education ministry has declared a "zero tolerance" policy on harassment, and in South Korea a former presidential contender now faces rape charges.

But in Japan, with its deeply entrenched gender attitudes and one of the world's worst records on female political representation, #MeToo's impact has been limited - until now.

Junichi Fukuda fiercely denies that he sexually harassed female reporters, allegations first reported last week by a magazine that has released audio of what it says was one of the encounters.

He stepped down Wednesday, saying the scandal had left him unable to do his job, and has threatened to sue the magazine.

The story has dominated headlines domestically, a development some experts said was a sign the #MeToo movement might finally be taking hold.

"The global #MeToo movement probably encouraged women who had been suffering harassment to speak up, giving them a sense of assurance that they don't have to tolerate it," said Sumire Hamada of the Asia-Japan Women's Resource Centre, a rights group.

But the episode has also laid bare how difficult it remains to report sexualharassment in Japan, and despite the apparent shift in mood, there is little immediate sign of tangible change.

One of the journalists who alleges Fukuda harassed her reported him to her boss at the local TV Asahi station but was told that going public would be too damaging, because her identity would be revealed.

And when the allegations against Fukuda first emerged, Finance Minister Taro Aso reacted dismissively, saying he had no plans to investigate.

He had verbally admonished Fukuda, he said, and considered him to be "sufficiently remorseful."

'Critical case'

Aso later reversed course, saying Fukuda would be fired if the claims were proven, and the ministry is now investigating.

But critics have questioned whether the ministry can investigate fairly, even though it has hired outside lawyers, and it has come under fire for asking reporters who have been harassed to come forward publicly.

"I hope that this case will not create bad pressure on victimised women to come out to the public with their identity being disclosed," said Chizuko Ueno, a feminist sociologist and professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo.

More than 25,000 people have signed a petition demanding the ministry protect the rights of victims.

"This is a very critical case," said Mari Miura, a professor of political science at Tokyo's Sophia University and a specialist on gender issues.

"Many people have criticised the way in which the finance ministry intended to handle the situation... that's why this incident might have a huge impact or the potential to change Japanese society."

Activists say the country is ripe for change, with just 2.8 percent of rape victims reporting their assault to police, and society expecting "harassment victims to bear it silently," said Hamada.

Last year, reporter Shiori Ito made headlines after publicly accusing a prominent television journalist of raping her.

She was savaged online and even received death threats, and her experience with authorities was not much better, she told AFP earlier this year.

Male police officers ordered her to re-enact her rape with a life-size doll, an experience she described as "like a second rape."

'Shameful'

Elsewhere in Asia, things have been different.

This month, former South Korean presidential contender Ahn Hee-Jung was indicted for raping his aide, and women have come forward to accuse artists, writers and athletes of sexual abuse.

And China's education ministry announced a "zero tolerance" policy after a professor was found to have harassed multiple students.

The relative silence in Japan is all the more striking given Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's stated commitment to increasing women's participation in the workforce.

His sole comment on the issue came Thursday, when he described the circumstances of Fukuda's resignation as "regrettable" and pledged to restore trust in his government.

"It's shameful that the two top leaders in Japan, the prime minister and the finance minister, do not understand the significance of sexual harassment cases," said Miura.

She said she hoped local media would avoid "victim blaming", noting that although TV Asahi now planned to complain to the finance ministry over the sexual harassmentof its reporter, it had initially criticised her for going to the weekly magazine.

And she said other women might now feel empowered to share their experiences, as Seiko Noda, one of only two female cabinet ministers, did on Wednesday.

"When I was in my twenties, I experienced sexual harassment from some men while I was doing political activities," Noda told a parliament session.

"It is so hard that you can't easily tell your family or friends, not to mention your boss."

 
 
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