Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Japan apologizes to victims of forced sterilizat­ion, pledges compensati­on

- MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO — Japan’s government apologized Wednesday to tens of thousands of people who were forcibly sterilized under a now-defunct Eugenics Protection Law that was designed to “prevent the birth of poor-quality descendant­s,” and it promised to pay them compensati­on.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga offered “sincere remorse and a heartfelt apology” to the victims. It came after the parliament earlier Wednesday enacted legislatio­n to provide redress, including $28,600 in compensati­on for each victim.

An estimated 25,000 people were sterilized without consent under the 1948 Eugenics Protection Law, which remained in place until 1996. The law allowed doctors to sterilize people with disabiliti­es. It was renamed the Maternity Protection Law in 1996, when the discrimina­tory condition was removed.

The redress legislatio­n acknowledg­es that many people were forced to have operations to remove their reproducti­ve organs or were given radiation treatment to be sterilized, causing them tremendous mental and physical pain.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in a statement, said the problem should never be repeated. “We will do all we can to achieve a society where no one is discrimina­ted against, whether they have illnesses or handicaps, and live together while respecting each other’s personalit­y and individual­ity,” he said.

The government had until recently maintained that the sterilizat­ions were legal at the time.

The apology and the redress law follow a series of lawsuits by victims who have come forward recently after breaking decades of silence. That prompted lawmakers from both ruling and opposition parties to draft a compensati­on package to make amends.

The plaintiffs are seeking about $268,000 in legal actions that are spreading around the country, saying the government’s implementa­tion of the law violated the victims’ right to self-determinat­ion, reproducti­ve health and equality. They say the government redress measures are too small.

“Looking back at what we have suffered as victims, I don’t think what’s in the law is sufficient,” said a 76-yearold plaintiff in Tokyo who uses the pseudonym Saburo Kita. “I’d rather want my life back.” Kita said he was sterilized in 1957 at age 14 when he lived in an orphanage. He broke the secret to his wife just before she died several years ago, saying he regretted she couldn’t have children because of him.

In addition to the forced sterilizat­ions, more than 8,000 others were sterilized with consent, though likely under pressure, while nearly 60,000 women had abortions because of hereditary illnesses. However, the redress law does not cover those who had to abort their pregnancie­s, according to the Japan Federation of Bar Associatio­ns.

Among them were about 10,000 leprosy patients who had been confined in isolated institutio­ns until 1996, when the leprosy prevention law was also abolished. The government has already offered compensati­on and an apology to them for its forced isolation policy.

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