Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'We're not wombs': Japan women seek rights to sterilisation

EUR -
AED 4.223641
AFN 71.870242
ALL 96.008357
AMD 435.071371
ANG 2.058835
AOA 1054.617283
ARS 1604.927372
AUD 1.628457
AWG 2.071569
AZN 1.959171
BAM 1.952978
BBD 2.324112
BDT 141.595411
BGN 1.955613
BHD 0.43432
BIF 3425.476113
BMD 1.150073
BND 1.471036
BOB 7.973479
BRL 6.03397
BSD 1.153898
BTN 106.296414
BWP 15.555051
BYN 3.40197
BYR 22541.436182
BZD 2.320816
CAD 1.569309
CDF 2504.859301
CHF 0.905131
CLF 0.026564
CLP 1048.901277
CNY 7.899872
CNH 7.920462
COP 4257.99679
CRC 543.899939
CUC 1.150073
CUP 30.476942
CVE 110.105909
CZK 24.434428
DJF 205.49041
DKK 7.472193
DOP 70.486317
DZD 151.646025
EGP 60.193722
ERN 17.251099
ETB 180.116471
FJD 2.547875
FKP 0.858061
GBP 0.862762
GEL 3.122487
GGP 0.858061
GHS 12.502935
GIP 0.858061
GMD 83.955081
GNF 10116.119473
GTQ 8.848215
GYD 241.421174
HKD 9.002411
HNL 30.544936
HRK 7.53459
HTG 151.146354
HUF 391.841944
IDR 19493.742004
ILS 3.614392
IMP 0.858061
INR 106.298396
IQD 1511.715742
IRR 1520138.102528
ISK 144.403516
JEP 0.858061
JMD 180.603552
JOD 0.815418
JPY 183.31935
KES 149.038153
KGS 100.57426
KHR 4631.207758
KMF 492.231415
KPW 1035.104124
KRW 1714.621526
KWD 0.353142
KYD 0.961611
KZT 564.843865
LAK 24721.387876
LBP 103336.441305
LKR 358.763188
LRD 211.174876
LSL 19.063039
LTL 3.395868
LVL 0.695668
LYD 7.365262
MAD 10.813975
MDL 20.03796
MGA 4782.94363
MKD 61.637855
MMK 2415.177093
MNT 4105.926165
MOP 9.30163
MRU 45.857545
MUR 52.914998
MVR 17.779805
MWK 2000.947963
MXN 20.51443
MYR 4.522129
MZN 73.4872
NAD 19.062956
NGN 1608.527119
NIO 42.467531
NOK 11.183445
NPR 170.069094
NZD 1.973548
OMR 0.442209
PAB 1.153933
PEN 3.948794
PGK 4.976744
PHP 68.505842
PKR 322.348333
PLN 4.271746
PYG 7471.107654
QAR 4.207121
RON 5.094023
RSD 117.421366
RUB 91.415753
RWF 1687.01112
SAR 4.31598
SBD 9.259999
SCR 16.875782
SDG 691.194098
SEK 10.77625
SGD 1.47149
SHP 0.862853
SLE 28.293359
SLL 24116.463866
SOS 658.328755
SRD 42.974212
STD 23804.194795
STN 24.464333
SVC 10.09741
SYP 127.517064
SZL 19.067869
THB 37.078704
TJS 11.060719
TMT 4.036757
TND 3.392598
TOP 2.7691
TRY 50.820876
TTD 7.830686
TWD 36.73361
TZS 3001.514106
UAH 51.093421
UGX 4319.758439
USD 1.150073
UYU 46.143328
UZS 14003.766147
VES 506.508889
VND 30226.225803
VUV 137.546605
WST 3.121786
XAF 654.99068
XAG 0.013712
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.10813
XCG 2.079695
XDR 0.814598
XOF 655.002053
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.350186
ZAR 19.31122
ZMK 10352.03943
ZMW 22.41532
ZWL 370.323125
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.82

    -0.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    17.25

    -0.58%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.14

    -0.43%

  • BCC

    -2.2800

    69.62

    -3.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.1

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    25.68

    -0.82%

  • GSK

    -0.8700

    54.28

    -1.6%

  • RIO

    -1.3800

    90.7

    -1.52%

  • NGG

    1.1200

    90.81

    +1.23%

  • RELX

    -0.5800

    34.18

    -1.7%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.31

    -0.63%

  • BTI

    0.7300

    59.89

    +1.22%

  • AZN

    -0.8100

    192.5

    -0.42%

  • BP

    0.6000

    42.16

    +1.42%

'We're not wombs': Japan women seek rights to sterilisation
'We're not wombs': Japan women seek rights to sterilisation / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP

'We're not wombs': Japan women seek rights to sterilisation

When Kazane Kajiya voluntarily sterilised herself in the United States aged 27, she essentially "flipped the middle finger" at Japan's patriarchal society that had long pushed her towards motherhood.

Text size:

In the rapidly ageing country desperate to boost its falling birth rates, women seeking to make themselves infertile were assumed "not even to exist", Kajiya, who has never wanted children, told AFP.

She and four other women are now challenging the constitutionality of Japan's decades-old "maternity protection" law, one of the world's most restrictive barriers to sterilisation.

A verdict in their landmark lawsuit dubbed "maternity is not my body's purpose" is due next week.

Under the law, a woman must have multiple children with her health at risk, or face life-threatening danger from pregnancy, to qualify for sterilisation. Even then, spousal consent is required.

This bans physicians from operating on healthy, childless women like Kajiya, now 29, who flew to the US to have her fallopian tubes removed in what she described as a minimally invasive procedure.

It was her "ultimate no" to being treated as a "future incubator".

To her, the law signals the government is "dead-set against giving freedom to end reproductive capacity to women who haven't fulfilled their 'duties' to bear multiple children for the sake of the nation".

Growing up, she was told her uterine lining represented the "bed for a baby" and that period pain was preparation for labour.

"I felt like I had been shoved onto a train bound for motherhood," she recalled.

By having the surgery, "I smashed the windows, and hurled myself out of that train.

"We're not wombs, we're humans."

- Japan as an 'outlier' -

A holdover from a wartime era where women were considered resources for population growth, the law effectively "manages all fertile women as potential maternal bodies", Michiko Kameishi, lead lawyer for the case, told AFP.

Its spousal consent requirement suggests "women are not seen as independent beings capable of self-determination".

The lawyer aims to establish women have constitutionally guaranteed rights to bodily freedom, placing sterilisation on par with plastic surgery or tattooing.

Kajiya once wondered if discomfort with being female explained her feelings but dismissed that "because I hate beards and like pretty clothes", she said. She even came to terms with menstruation.

What she truly loathes, she concluded, is her biological capacity to reproduce.

That innate aversion to fertility, the pressure on women to give birth and the desire for safe, effective contraception have united the plaintiffs.

Among modern democracies, Japan is an outlier on sterilisation access.

The lawsuit cites a 2002 study by EngenderHealth, a global NGO focused on sexual and reproductive health, that says more than 70 countries -- including many industrialised economies -- explicitly permitted the procedure as a method of contraception.

Japan was among eight countries that forbade or severely restricted it.

In Japan, condoms -- a male-controlled method -- is the most popular form of birth control.

Just 0.5 percent of women choose sterilisation and 2.7 percent use the contraceptive pill, seen as costly, according to one survey.

Contraceptive injections and implants remain unavailable.

And while men's vasectomies similarly require spousal consent, enforcement tends to be laxer with urology clinics openly touting the procedure, campaigners say.

The government, meanwhile, has defended the current system as protecting women from "future regret".

Given the "irreversible" nature of sterilisation, existing restrictions "help guarantee those considering surgery rights to self-determination over whether they want to have children", the government said in a document filed with Tokyo District Court.

- Myths, guilt -

These restrictions have historically sparked little debate even among feminists who have strenuously opposed Japan's spousal consent requirement for abortions.

That's because few want to speak out in a society where "the myth persists that women are incomplete without motherhood", lawyer Kameishi said.

"Merely being childless makes them feel a bit guilty, so how could they speak openly about their desire to proactively remove their reproductive potential?"

Another plaintiff raising her voice is 26-year-old Rena Sato.

As an aromantic and asexual person, Sato -- a pseudonym she uses in the lawsuit -- categorically rules out marriage and childbirth.

"To me, the act of bringing a life out of my body is strongly linked to heterosexual romance, so this function of fertility has no place in my sexuality," she told AFP.

Her only possibility of pregnancy is therefore through rape, she said.

"If I'm forced to maintain my fertility, it'd be tantamount to the state telling me to accept the risk of sexual violence while alive."

Now married to a partner who respects her choice to be child-free, Kajiya has no regrets about getting sterilised.

But she sometimes wonders whether Japan pushed her to an extreme.

"Had I been born in a country where women have the same rights to bodily autonomy as men, and where no one assumes I will become a mother," she said, "I might've not let incisions be made to my body."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)