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Japan women prisoners suffer serious abuse: Human Rights Watch

  • Female inmates are sometimes shackled during labour and immediately after birth, and their babies are taken away soon after, the NGO’s new report says
  • Bullying by cellmates and prison guards’ frustration with some older prisoners’ limited mobility are also among issues highlighted

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Japan’s women prisoners suffer a range of abuses, including poor healthcare and being handcuffed during pregnancy, a new report by Human Rights Watch has revealed. Photo: Shutterstock
Agence France-Presse

Handcuffs during pregnancy, separation from newborn babies, and insufficient care for elderly inmates are among the abuses suffered by women incarcerated in Japan, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Tuesday.

Female inmates are sometimes shackled during labour and immediately after birth, the international NGO alleged in a new report, based on interviews with nearly 60 formerly jailed women.

Japan’s ministry of justice denied some of the claims, saying that restraints were “not used when imprisoned women are breastfeeding, holding, bathing, or changing the baby’s diapers”, according to the report.

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It also said that “appropriate medical measures are taken for prisoners”.

When contacted by AFP, the justice ministry was not immediately available for comment.

According to HRW, new mothers also often have their babies taken away from them soon after birth.

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