Forced Sterilizations in Japan: The Push for Justice

Society

Between the end of World War II and the 1970s, some 16,000 people with mental illnesses and disabilities were forced to undergo sterilization under Japan’s eugenics laws. Although the laws are no longer on the statute books, the government has been insensitive to the suffering of victims and slow to make recompense. Recent lawsuits to seek damages and an official apology have brought the issue into the public eye, prompting questions about the government’s commitment to social justice and human rights.

Lessons from Sweden

As countries that have already faced similar questions of compensation and official apology for forced sterilizations, Germany and Sweden offer an example for Japan on how it might address the issue in the months and years to come. In Germany, compensation to victims of the Nazi sterilization and euthanasia programs began in 1980. But since these cases took place within the unique framework of compensation for Nazi crimes, the case of Sweden offers is probably a more useful precedent for Japan.

Moves to address past sterilizations in Sweden began with a series of articles in the influential Dagens Nyheter newspaper in August 1997. The government responded swiftly, and set up a study committee to investigate. The committee delivered its interim report in January 1999. The report took the view that the sterilizations performed between 1937 and 1975 had not been carried out with the full consent of the individuals involved, and recommended that damages of 170,500 kroner (approximately ¥2 million) be paid to each victim. The necessary legislation was passed, and damages have been paid to more than 1,600 people in the years since.

Democracies make mistakes, but the systems need to be in place to correct these errors when they occur. The values and norms of society are always undergoing gradual change, and it will sometimes happen that policies carried out in the past are judged abhorrent by today’s standards. The proper response is to carry out a prompt investigation and offer recompense and apologies to all those who were affected. This is the sign of a mature, developed society.

Japan’s Insensitivity to the Human Rights of Disabled People

Compared with Sweden, Japan has until recently been astonishingly insensitive to the basic human right of people with disabilities to have families of their own. The government has failed to understand that the people whose rights were infringed in this way deserve to be compensated, and has taken a harsh and coldhearted attitude toward the victims and their families.

Some people made intermittent attempts in the past to point out the problems with the law’s concept of heredity and forced sterilizations, but these had zero effect. It was only in 1994, when international forums like the United Nations International Conference on Population and Development and the World Conference on Women started to pay attention to the anachronistic nature of Japan’s Eugenic Protection Act, that things began to change. Almost overnight, the offending legislation was torn from the statute book. Recently, there have been reports that the government and Liberal Democratic Party have begun preparations for a special law that will provide compensation without waiting for the results of the court cases. Given the advanced age of the victims, and the fact that the evidence and records of what took place are often patchy, high-level political decisiveness will be essential, and there is surely a case to be made for flexibility and a new approach to compensation.

For decades, the government routinely infringed the basic rights of people with mental illnesses and disabilities, and for years since then the victims and their families have been ignored and silenced. These facts speak for themselves, and point unmistakably to serious shortcomings in Japanese society. Particularly distressing is the way in which politicians, bureaucrats, the media, and academia all allowed their intellectual, imaginative, and empathetic faculties to become so blunted that they lost their sense of social justice and fairness. I conclude this essay with a deep feeling of remorse. I hope the lessons of the past will ensure that similar mistakes are never repeated in the future.

(Originally published in Japanese on July 13, 2018. Banner photo: Legal representatives make their way to the Sapporo District Court on June 28, 2018, to file a lawsuit suing the government for damages on behalf of a couple forced to undergo sterilization. © Jiji.)

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human rights disability eugenics

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