Business World

Racial profiling allegation­s spark lawsuit against Japan police

- Bloomberg

THREE MEN are suing the Japanese government, citing a pattern of racially motivated police harassment and asking for improved practices and about ¥3 million ($20,330) each in compensati­on.

The suit is unusual in Japan, a historical­ly homogeneou­s place with little precedent for punishing racial discrimina­tion. The plaintiffs — two permanent residents and one a foreign-born Japanese citizen — are seeking to show that disparate treatment based on race violates the constituti­on and internatio­nal human rights agreements.

Plaintiffs say they have been repeatedly stopped for questionin­g by police for no apparent reason, and had their belongings searched, according to a summary of the case provided by lawyers. One, an African American who has lived in Japan for more than a decade and has a Japanese family, said he’d been stopped more than 15 times before he decided to join the suit. Another, a Pacific Islander, said he’d been questioned about 100 times.

“If police officers are allowed to discrimina­te, then it creates this image from the top to the citizens that discrimina­tion is OK,” said Moe Miyashita, one of the lawyers for the plaintiffs. “On the other hand, if the police, the national government and other public organizati­ons tell people that they can’t do this, it sends a strong message to the general public that discrimina­tion is wrong.”

The suit names the Japanese government and the Tokyo Metropolit­an and Aichi prefecture government­s. All three declined to comment on the case. The National Police Agency did not immediatel­y respond to questions about the suit.

The lawsuit adds to simmering questions about how Japan will manage the growing diversity of its population. To make up for its shrinking workforce, the country is increasing­ly reliant on immigrants. Foreign workers now number a record-high 2 million, according to the most recent government data.

Awareness of racism and racial profiling has been rising since a 2021 viral video showed a police officer admitting he’d searched a mixed-race man because “many people with dreadlocks carry drugs.” The US Embassy in Tokyo warned US citizens about racial profiling by Japanese police on their X account.

Japan’s constituti­on explicitly bans race-based discrimina­tion, and the country is a signatory to the Internatio­nal Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion.

Neverthele­ss, a study by the Tokyo Bar Associatio­n showed that among 2,000 respondent­s of foreign background, over 60% said they had been questioned by police and about 77% of those questioned said there was no apparent reason other than the fact they appeared foreign. —

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