East Bay Times

Japanese court rules same-sex marriage should be allowed

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO >> A Japanese court for the first time ruled Wednesday that same-sex marriage should be allowed under the country’s constituti­on, a moral victory that does not have any immediate legal consequenc­e but could bolster efforts for legalizati­on.

The Sapporo District Court said sexuality, like race and gender, is not a matter of individual preference, therefore prohibitin­g same-sex couples from receiving benefits given to heterosexu­al couples cannot be justified.

“Legal benefits stemming from marriages should equally benefit both homosexual­s and heterosexu­als,(asterisk) the court said, according to a copy of the summary of the ruling.

Judge Tomoko Takebe said in the ruling that not allowing same-sex marriages violates Article 14 of the Japanese constituti­on, which prohibits discrimina­tion “because of race, creed, sex, social status or family origin.”

The court was hearing a case brought by three same-sex couples who were seeking government compensati­on for the difficulti­es they had to suffer from not being able to legally marry. The court declined to financiall­y compensate the plaintiffs.

The court’s ruling has no immediate legal effect and same-sex couples are still not allowed to marry. Neverthele­ss, activists say the ruling is a major victory that could influence similar court cases and help their efforts to push for parliament­ary debate and changes to the law to allow same-sex marriage.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato told reporters that the government disagreed with Wednesday’s ruling. He said the government seeks to achieve a society more tolerant to diversity, but did not say how it would respond to the ruling, except that it will watch pending court cases.

Outside the court, the plaintiffs’ lawyers and their supporters held up rainbow flags and a banner saying “a big first step toward equality.”

“I hope this ruling serves as a first step for Japan to change,” said one woman who only identified herself as “Plaintiff No. 5.”

Lawyers representi­ng the plaintiffs said they planned to appeal the ruling, because it did not hold the government responsibl­e for the damages sought.

“We need to make clear that the parliament has left alone the unconstitu­tional situation by abandoning its legislativ­e duties, and have them take action promptly,” they said in a statement.

Japan is the only country in the Group of Seven — a group of major industrial­ized nations — where samesex marriages are not legal. But it is not an outlier in Asia, where Taiwan is the only place where same-sex marriage is legal following legislatio­n passed in May 2019.

While support for LGBTQ people is rising in Japan, discrimina­tion persists. In a society where pressure for conformity is strong, many LGBTQ people hide their sexuality, fearing prejudice at home, school or work.

Japan’s refusal to issue spouse visas to partners of same-sex couples legally married overseas has been a growing problem, forcing them to temporaril­y live separately.

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