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Japan LGBTQ activists have launched an engagement group ahead of G7. Photo: AP

Japan LGBTQ activists launch engagement group ahead of G7

  • The Pride 7 group plans to submit a policy recommendation to Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, and to hold an inaugural summit this month
  • Japan is the only member of the Group of Seven advanced industrialised nations that lacks a law protecting the rights of LGBTQ people
Japan

Japanese LGBTQ activists and rights groups have launched a civil “engagement group” to make policy proposals ahead of the Group of Seven summit in Japan and announced plans to hold an inaugural Pride 7 summit in Tokyo later this month, seeking to accelerate their efforts to get the Japanese government to adopt an anti-discrimination law.

Japan is the only member of the Group of Seven advanced industrialised nations that lacks a law protecting the rights of LGBTQ people.

“Other G7 members are watching if Japan enacts an anti-discrimination law,” said Natsuo Hayashi, co-director of the Japan Alliance for LGBT Legislation, a local civil group.

His group, joined by two other organisations, on Wednesday announced the launch of Pride 7, which plans to make policy proposals for G7 organisers in the hopes of achieving an LGBTQ anti-discrimination law in Japan while also addressing problems in other countries, especially in Asia. P7 is joined by rights organisations in 10 other countries, including six other G7 members, as well as Thailand, Vietnam, Botswana and Mexico, and the EU.

Gon Matsunaka, another member of the group, said a P7 summit will be held on March 30 with ambassadors from G7 nations and representatives of economic organisations and labour unions. Matsunaka said they plan to submit a policy recommendation to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

Japanese opposition party submits bill to approve same-sex marriage

LGBTQ activists and their supporters have stepped up their efforts to achieve an anti-discrimination law following discriminatory remarks in February by a former Kishida aide, who said he wouldn’t want to live next to LGBTQ people and that citizens would flee Japan if same-sex marriage were allowed.

Amid national outrage over the remarks, Kishida’s Liberal Democratic Party and other non-partisan lawmakers have begun preparing legislation to promote awareness of LGBTQ rights, but some conservatives have shown resistance.

The activists noted that Japan signed the communique adopted at the G7 Elmau summit hosted in Germany last year that calls for “full, equal and meaningful participation of women and girls in all their diversity as well as LGBTIQ+ persons in politics, economics, education and all other spheres of society”, and must fulfil its commitment.

Support for sexual diversity has grown slowly in Japan and legal protections are still lacking for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. They often face discrimination at school, work and at home, causing many to hide their sexual identities.\

02:11

Tokyo court ruling upholds ban on same-sex marriage but leaves door open for legislative change

Tokyo court ruling upholds ban on same-sex marriage but leaves door open for legislative change

In recent years, more than 200 local municipalities, including Tokyo, have introduced certificates of partnerships for same-sex couples allowing them to rent flats and sign documents in medical emergencies, and for inheritance. Still, the certificates are not legally binding and same-sex couples are often barred from visiting each other in hospital and from getting access to other services available to married couples.

Recent surveys have shown most Japanese support legalising same-sex marriage. Rights activists say the conservative government has stonewalled the push for equal rights supported by the general public.

Kishida has insisted that allowing same-sex marriage would change Japan’s family values and the society and require a careful decision. He has not clearly expressed his view, and is seen as indecisive amid his considerations about governing the ultraconservatives in his party who object to a law spelling out anti-discrimination against LGBTQ people.

The party quashed an attempt to enact an equality awareness promotion law ahead of the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. While momentum is on the rise ahead of the G7, experts say legalising an anti-discrimination law for LGBTQ people would have to wait sometime if they miss this chance.

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