Japan has just passed the law against domestic violence last
summer.  Although it is very limited and inadequacte, I think the cultural
process of bringing this issue could be similar to China.

The article from Women's Enews at the end of this message explains this
process in English.

Tamie Kaino, at Ochanomizu University is leading figure in this field.  She
has website, but in Japanese.  I do not know if she has written anything in
English... but she can be contacted at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.  I heard
that she is fluent in English.  She has done some comparative studies on
other Asian countries with regards to domestic violence law.

Peace

Yukiko

**********************************************************************
Yukiko NAKAJIMA
Graduate Assistant
Minnesota Center Against Violence and Abuse (MINCAVA)
School of Social Work, University of Minnesota
105 Peters Hall
1404 Gortner Avenue
St Paul MN 55108-6142
USA
Tel: +1-612-624-3059
Fax: +1-612-625-4288
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----------------

Women's Enews
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/740/context/archive

Japan Adopts Tough Domestic Violence Law
Run Date: 12/02/01
By Melinda Rice
WEnews correspondent

For many years in Japan, domestic violence existed in the shadows--it
was a husband's prerogative, a private family matter. Finally, a law
gives women some protections, but the burden of proof is on women and
abuse is still not a crime.

TOKYO (WOMENSENEWS)--Noriko aimed the camera carefully into the
mirror, alert for any sounds that her husband was returning.
Everything--her future, her children's future--depended on the
picture she was about to take. It showed Noriko's face bruised and
swelling from the most recent beating inflicted by her husband.

Noriko Shimada--not her real name--had already left him three times
during their 10-year marriage, going to family and friends for help.
But he always found her. This time, she was armed with determination
not to return, help from the Feminist Therapy Center in Tokyo--and
the picture.

It eventually helped convince the Japanese courts--often
unsympathetic to the pleas of battered women--to give her protection
and a divorce.

Noriko is a rare example of a Japanese woman who has prevailed
against domestic violence in Japan.

"People don't think it is a crime. (They think) it is a private
matter inside the home," says Mariko Bando, director-general for
Japan's Gender Equality Bureau.

Now the Japanese have to think again. The country's first domestic
violence law, passed by the national legislature April 6, went into
effect nationwide on Oct. 13.


Law Gives Some Protection, Does Not Make Domestic Violence a Crime
------------------------------------------------------------------

Advocates for women's rights laud it as an important first step, but
stressed that more legal protection for abused women is needed in
Japan. The new law does not make domestic abuse a crime in a society
in which, by tradition, men are considered superior to women,
violence is a man's prerogative, and domestic abuse is a private
affair and no business of the police and criminal justice system.

The Law on Prevention of Spouse Violence and Protection of Victims
allows district courts to issue six-month restraining orders against
abusers and to evict abusers from the home for as long as two weeks.
Abusers who violate the court orders can receive as much as a year in
jail and a fine of up to 1 million yen (or about $8,000). Anyone who
makes a false report of domestic violence can be fined up to 100,000
yen (or about $800). The law makes no distinction between couples who
are legally married and those who are living together.

The new law also requires local governments to provide financial
assistance to organizations that assist victims of domestic violence,
and it provides for the national government to establish new
facilities to help victims.

By April 2002, Bando expects each of Japan's 47 prefectures
(governmental entities roughly equivalent to U.S. counties) to have a
government-funded counseling center up and running, with trained
counselors available. The centers will serve as temporary shelters
and counseling centers and provide resources to help women find jobs
and places to live during court-ordered six-month reprieves from
their husbands.

Kimi KawanaBefore the law passed this year, only about 20 private
domestic violence shelters and about 50 multi-use government-funded
women's service centers existed in all of Japan. Most existing
facilities are clustered in urban areas such as Tokyo, Osaka and
Yokohama.

Six days after the new law went into effect, a man in his 60s from
Osaka, Japan's second-largest city, was accused of domestic violence
and banned from his home for two weeks by a district court. His wife,
a woman in her 40s who fled to a women's shelter, also was given a
six-month restraining order against the man. Among the abuse cited in
court papers: He knocked out her teeth when he hit her in the face
with a guitar in May.

"We expect to see more women trying to flee from their husbands if
they can go to centers and get support," says Tomoe Matsuda, a
counselor at the Feminist Therapy Center, a private shelter in north
Tokyo for victims of domestic violence. The support, she says, is
critical. Without it, women are financially dependent on their
abusive partners.

A Tokyo woman also appealed for an order of protection against her
husband in October, but she withdrew the complaint before the courts
took action. Women's rights activists said it is likely the woman
acted in response to threats from her spouse or entreaties from the
family to preserve its honor and keep family matters private.

"This is very typical," says Kimi Kawana, an editorial writer for the
Asahi Shimbun, Japan's largest daily newspaper. "The victim doesn't
have the knowledge that this is a crime."


Domestic Violence Existed in Shadows, Not Seen as National Concern
------------------------------------------------------------------

"For many years, domestic violence has existed in Japan, but in the
shadows," she says. "What happened in the family was not supposed to
be of national concern."

Last year, in a book called "Basic Ideas of Administrative Police
Law," National Police Agency official Masahiro Tanaka wrote that
police officers believe they should not treat domestic violence cases
in the same way they would handle other violent incidents because
family affairs have less influence on social order and public
security.

One woman, a frequent victim of abuse, told Japan Times Online:
"Once, a policeman went so far as to tell me that they cannot do
anything until I die."

That attitude began to change, slowly, in the early 1990s as
activists worked to raise public awareness of domestic violence in
Japan.

A weak feminist movement has existed for decades in Japan and has
worked to help victims of domestic violence in the face of deep
cultural reluctance to address the issue. Some studies showed a
widely held belief among the Japanese public that domestic violence
was a problem in the United States and other Western countries, not
in Japan. A few groups conducted studies showing domestic violence
was a pervasive problem, but there was never widespread support for
laws to prevent it or help the victims.

In 1995, Japanese activists attended the United Nations' Fourth
Annual International Conference on Women in Beijing. Eradication of
violence against women was a major focus, and the activists returned
home energized and determined to make a difference, Kawana says. They
urged the Japanese government to take action.


Government Study Says 'Not a Moment to Lose' to Tackle Violence
---------------------------------------------------------------

In 1997, then-Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto asked the national
Council for Gender Equality to study the issue of domestic violence.
It studied and deliberated for the next three years, and in the
summer of 2000 it reported that there was "not a moment to lose" in
dealing with the issue and that public involvement to that point had
been insufficient. The report was an affirmation of action already
underway in national politics.

The previous year, 1999, the Japanese government bowed to increasing
public pressure on the issue of domestic violence and conducted a
nationwide survey on the subject.

"We found nearly 5 percent of wives experienced critical violence at
the hands of their husbands--5 percent! That is not a small number,"
says Bando of the Gender Equality Bureau.

The study also found that one in seven women had received medical
treatment as a result of spousal beatings. Many women also reported
verbal abuse along the lines of, "Thanks to me you can live, you can
eat." There were also widespread reports of wives' mail and telephone
calls being monitored by their husbands.

The abuses were demographically uniform: The survey found no
differences in the types or levels of abuse suffered by highly
educated women versus poorly educated ones, among poor, rich and
middle-class women.


Osaka Government Study Finds Two-Thirds of Women Reported Abuse
---------------------------------------------------------------

A survey by the local government in Osaka, found that two-thirds of
women there reported abuse by their partners.

Another study by the national government showed that about one-third
of the women murdered in Japan each year are killed by their
husbands, a proportion similar to the rate in the United States. Last
year in Japan, 1,096 murders and injuries related to domestic
violence were reported in Japan--almost double the number reported
the previous year, according to the National Police Agency.

Responding to increasing pressure from the public, the National
Police Agency has ordered police in prefectures to crack down on
domestic violence and other crimes against women. A few police
departments have established special departments to deal with
domestic violence complaints or formed networks of medical providers,
counselors, lawyers and police personnel.

By the time women legislators moved to make a national law protecting
the victims of domestic violence in 1999, no widespread opposition
materialized. However, editorial writer Kawana says there was still
concern that police would be interfering where they did not
belong--in Japanese family matters.

The right of men to use violence against their wives is ingrained in
Japanese culture and is considered a normal part of marriage among
much of the older generations. Numerous studies show that attitude is
changing, with younger Japanese more likely to view domestic violence
as a problem than their parents and grandparents. In one survey,
about half of men and women in their 20s said they believe domestic
violence is a problem in Japan. But attitudes are changing slowly,
too slowly in the opinions of the victims and their advocates.

"There are still so many Japanese men who think the husband is
superior to the wife," Bando says. "So if the wife will not obey, he
uses violence without any guilty feelings."


New Law Has Many Flaws, Critics Say, Places Burden of Proof on Women
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Domestic violence is not yet a specific crime in Japan. Men can be
charged and tried in criminal court for assault and murder, but not
for spousal abuse. But charges against husbands are increasingly
being pursued, sometimes successfully, under existing laws for murder
and assault.

The new law that went into effect in October establishes, for the
first time in Japan, that spousal battery is something to be dealt
with in the criminal courts.

But critics blast the law for requiring too much from the victims and
not doing enough for them. To obtain a restraining order, the burden
of proof is on the victim, who must notify authorities and submit
either a notarized affidavit or reports from doctors, women's
shelters or police backing up the claim of abuse. The law does
contain a provision for the courts to issue emergency injunctions
against abusive partners without a hearing when danger is imminent
for the victim.

There is also no recourse for women seeking relief from marital rape.
On numerous occasions, the courts have upheld a man's right to force
or coerce his wife into having sex.

Despite these problems, women's rights advocates hail the new law as
groundbreaking in a country where women are still largely treated as
second-class citizens. What is needed now, they say, is an educated
and informed public that will not tolerate battery of half of Japan's
population by the other half.

"Education or enlightenment is very important to let them understand
that hitting or harming family members are crimes," says the Asahi
Shimbun's Kawana. "So far, if you hurt other people it is a crime,
but if you hurt members of the family it is not a crime. This must
change."

Melinda Rice is a free-lance writer based in Texas.

--------------------------------------------------------------------


For more information:
---------------------

Gender Equality Bureau, Japan:
http://www.gender.go.jp/

HELP Asian Women's Shelter:
http://www.sfc.keio.ac.jp/~thiesmey/HELP.html

Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence:
http://www.atask.org/

Unites Nations Women Watch:
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/


Copyright 2002 Women's Enews Inc.




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