A Japan court has upheld a same-sex marriage ban. Activists still have hope

While the ban was upheld in a Tokyo court, the ruling said a lack of legal protection for same-sex families violated their human rights - a comment welcomed by plaintiffs.

A group of people are seen holding signs calling for marriage equality in Japan.

Plaintiffs and supporters react in front of the Tokyo District Court in Tokyo on 30 November, 2022, following a ruling in a lawsuit filed by same-sex couples seeking damages from the government. Source: Getty / KAZUHIRO NOGI

Key Points
  • A Tokyo district court on Wednesday upheld a ban on same-sex marriage.
  • But the ruling said a lack of legal protection for same-sex families violated their human rights.
  • Japan is the only G7 nation that does not allow same-sex marriage, and its constitution defines marriage as based on the mutual consent of both sexes.
A Tokyo court upheld a ban on same-sex marriage on Wednesday but said a lack of legal protection for same-sex families violated their human rights, a comment welcomed by plaintiffs as a step towards aligning Japan with other G7 nations.

Japan is the only G7 nation that does not allow same-sex marriage, and its constitution defines marriage as based on the mutual consent of both sexes.

Although Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's ruling party has revealed no plans yet to review the matter or propose changes, several senior members support same-sex marriage.
In Wednesday's ruling, the Tokyo district court said the ban was constitutional, but added that the absence of a legal system to protect same-sex families infringed their human rights.

"This is actually a fairly positive ruling," said Nobuhito Sawasaki, one of the lawyers involved in the case.

"While marriage remains between a man and a woman, and the ruling supported that, it also said that the current situation with no legal protections for same-sex families is not good, and suggested something must be done about it," he told Reuters.
Japan does not permit same-sex couples to marry or inherit each other's assets, such as a shared home, and denies them parental rights to each other's children, while even hospital visits can be difficult.

Though partnership certificates from municipalities cover about 60 per cent of Japan's population, they do not give same-sex couples the same rights enjoyed by heterosexual couples.

The Tokyo ruling promises to be influential as the capital has an outsized influence on the rest of Japan.
It had been keenly awaited after hopes were raised by a 2021 ruling in the city of Sapporo that the ban was unconstitutional, although another decision in Osaka in June upheld the ban.

The eight plaintiffs in the case said the ban contravened their human rights and demanded damages of one million yen (A$10,700) although the court rejected that.

"This is hard to accept," said Gon Matsunaka, head of the activist group Marriage for All Japan.

Both heterosexual and same-sex couples should be able to benefit equally from the system of marriage, as everyone is equal under the law, he added.

"It (the ruling) clearly said that is not possible."

Yet the recognition that same-sex families lacked legal protections was "a big step", he said.

'Parts of it gave me hope'

The plaintiffs, who unfurled a banner outside the courthouse reading, "A step forward for Marriage Equality" after the ruling, said they were encouraged.

"There were parts of this that were disappointing, but parts of it gave me hope," said one of them, Katsu, who gave only his first name.

The decision came a day after the United States Senate passed a same-sex marriage protection bill and Singapore lifted a ban on gay sex but limited the prospects for legalising same-sex marriage.

Two more cases are pending in Japan, and activists and lawyers hope an accumulation of judicial decisions supporting same-sex marriage will eventually push lawmakers to change the system, even if this is unlikely soon.

"I hope there will be legislative debate about this," said plaintiff Shizuka Oe. "We will keep making efforts."

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3 min read
Published 30 November 2022 9:59pm
Updated 30 November 2022 10:03pm
Source: Reuters


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