Japanese politician faces backlash for claiming LGBT education 'would mean no more children'Source:
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/as...ty-b883537.html
A member of Japan’s ruling
Liberal Democratic Party, Masateru Shiraishi, is facing a severe
online backlash after commenting that his ward would
cease to exist if LGBT+ rights were
protected by law.
Shiraishi, who was called a
dinosaur on social media for his comments, has
so far not refuted or retracted his statement despite
objections from his own party. "This is impossible, but
if all Japanese women were
lesbian or all Japanese men were
gay, then
do you think the next generation of people will be born?" Mr Shiraishi said at a 25 September assembly session[ of Tokyo's Adachi Ward, The Japan Times reported.
The
low fertility rate is a significant problem in Japan. It is an issue that
remains prevalent even as the Japanese government has taken measures to overcome it over the last few decades. In 2019, the Asian country recorded a total fertility rate of 1.36, with just over 865,000 babies born – a record low.
But
Takeru Shimodaira, a member of
Japan Alliance for LGBT Legislation, which is demanding a law to ban discrimination, asked Mr Shiraishi to correct his remark, noting that it was “based on discrimination and prejudice, as
LGBT people are not responsible for Japan's decreasing birthrate".
This is
not the first time that Japanese politicians have faced a backlash over such comments. In 2018,
another leader, Mio Sugita, faced criticism for
opposing the government’s support for
same-sex couples.The backlash against Mr Shiraishi reflects the
polarising issue of LGBT+ rights in Japan. The country still
does not legally recognise same-sex marriage, although
campaigning by the LGBT+ community and its allies has led to
progressive measures including the availability of so-called
“partnership certificates” in many municipalities.
A global acceptance index of the LGBT+ community released in 2019 noted that globally
Japan is among the countries such as Brazil, Canada, Great Britain, and the United States where
acceptance of LGBT+ people and their rights has
increased. However, it had revealed that even as Japan witnessed an increase in acceptance, it has had a
“slower rate of change, and it seems that, in 2017, acceptance levels were slightly lower than in 2016 and 2015”.
Preparations for the Tokyo
Olympics, which were postponed to 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, had brought
LGBT+ issues into the
limelight as Tokyo passed an ordinance to
protect LGBT+ visitors from potential abuse.
Although there has been a
consistent pressure on Japan’s government to pass better laws to protect the LGBT+ community, it has
thus far resisted. In April, earlier this year, about
100 human rights and LGBT+ organisations wrote to then-prime minister Shinzo Abe demanding such a
law be instated.
Added on I guess it's easier to blame LGBT instead of fixing the obvious work-life imbalance in Japan that prohibits child-bearing.
