The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Sexual, power harassment rock Defense Ministry, SDFs

- By Yohei Kano Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

The Defense Ministry has launched a special investigat­ion involving all 300,000 members of the Self-Defense Forces to root out harassment, prompted by a sexual assault complaint led by Rina Gonoi, a former Ground Self-Defense Force member.

A DAILY PROBLEM

“ere are other victims besides me. I want [the SDF] to create an environmen­t in which its members can serve with peace of mind.”

Gonoi, 23, formally conveyed her grievances to Parliament­ary Vice Defense Minister Jiro Kimura at the Defense Ministry in Tokyo’s Ichigaya district on Aug. 31.

A er joining the GSDF in April 2020, Gonoi was assigned to Camp Koriyama in Fukushima Prefecture. She said she was subjected to sexual harassment on a daily basis, including being hugged by senior personnel, until she le the SDF in June 2022.

During the assault in August last year, a group of servicemen pressed the lower part of their bodies against her. e GSDF police investigat­ed the case and sent a report on three servicemen to prosecutor­s on suspicion of indecent assault.

Later, the Fukushima District Public Prosecutor­s O ce’s Koriyama branch dismissed the case for all three members.

Gonoi led a request for the case to be reviewed by the Committee for the Inquest of Prosecutio­n, which voted on Sept. 9 that dropping the charges was unjust on the ground that it was “di cult to say that the investigat­ion had been fully carried out,” leading prosecutor­s to reinvestig­ate the case.

A er leaving the forces, Gonoi conducted an online survey of former SDF members, as she was convinced others had undergone experience­s similar to hers.

She received 146 responses with reports of harassment, including one that said “An X-ray of a female team member was passed around for everyone to see” and another statement that read, “A senior member told me to participat­e in strip rock-paper-scissors.”

TOP-DOWN

Last fiscal year, the Defense Ministry recorded 2,311 cases in which individual­s sought advice concerning harassment — about seven times the number recorded in scal 2017, at 326 cases — with 90% of them being about “power harassment,” a term used in Japan to denote workplace bullying.

A former SDF serviceman in his 30s said he le the Maritime Self-Defense Force because of such harassment. He joined the MSDF a er graduating from high school.

One day, a er having obtained permission to leave his station to eat, he was summoned by his superior o cer.

“You’re a deserter,” the o cer told him. “You will be punished by death.”

e former MSDF member, who had been visiting a clinic because of insomnia, said the incident caused him to have a breakdown. “ere was a tacit understand­ing that SDF of

cials should put up with harassment, and it was di cult to speak up under such conditions,” he said.

e SDF is an organizati­on designed to cope with emergencie­s, and the Self-Defense Forces Law stipulates that “Personnel must faithfully follow the orders of their superiors in the performanc­e of their duties.”

At a regular press conference on Sept. 15, GSDF Chief of Sta Yoshihide Yoshida said: “In times of emergency, there are situations in which a superior o cer has to impose his will [on his subordinat­es] to a considerab­le extent. Under the circumstan­ces, there may be a climate in which harassment is likely to occur. However, orders given without respect for the individual, or that deny someone’s individual­ity, are absolutely unacceptab­le.”

IMPACT ON NATL DEFENSE

e Defense Ministry has been actively striving to recruit female SDF o cials. As of March, the number of SDF servicewom­en stood at about 19,000, or 8.3% of the total, but there are plans to increase this

gure to more than 12% by scal 2030.

e ministry, whose leaders say they are eager to get to the bottom of the harassment claims, is concerned that the situation will make it di cult to recruit talented personnel, which could a ect the foundation of the country’s defense capabiliti­es.

For the special investigat­ion, SDF o cials, ministry secretarie­s and reservists will be asked to report by letter or email by the end of October if they have ever experience­d sexual harassment or other forms of abuse.

Individual cases will be examined to see if appropriat­e action was taken. e defense minister will take remedial measures based on the results.

e ministry is providing a consultati­on service with lawyers and has also contracted independen­t counselors for personnel who fear their claims could be hushed up. e ministry has included about ¥20 million in its budget request for the next scal year to cover costs related to the issue. (Oct. 1)

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