PDA

View Full Version : Does Japan ignore sex crimes?



Jody Holeton
30th June 2003, 04:28
Dear all,

Does Japan ignore sex crimes?
Does it just wash over most crimes to hide from bad publicity and a loss of face?
Comments anyone?


Read this article....
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/29/international/asia/29JAPA.html?ex=1057550400&en=ae35a03eeb847174&ei=5040

Victims Say Japan Ignores Sex Crimes Committed by Teachers
By HOWARD W. FRENCH


AYATO, Japan ?ETwo years ago, a 16-year-old high school girl who lived near here was hospitalized with a high fever. After doctors found that she had an acute case of genital herpes, she told her parents that her teacher had had sex with her.

When approached by the parents, the teacher denied the claim, warning them that their daughter would be expelled if they reported him.

Experts say molestation and statutory rape are commonplace in schools across Japan, and that victims rarely come forward. To do so would violate a host of powerful social conventions, said Akiko Kamei, a retired teacher who is the country's only nationally known expert in classroom sexual abuse.

"In Japan there is a rape myth, which says that the victim of a rape is always to blame," Ms. Kamei said. "Moreover, women are told that if you suffer molestation or groping, you have to be ashamed. If you talk about it to anyone else, you are going to be tainted for the rest of your life."

Beyond that, even when they are identified and caught, molesters rarely receive more than a slap on the wrist.

Speaking at a public symposium, a member of Parliament, Seiichi Ota, recently made light of reports of gang rapes at a Tokyo university. "Boys who commit group rape are in good shape," Mr. Ota said. "I think they are rather normal. Whoops, I shouldn't have said that." (The legislator's comments were carried in many Japanese newspapers.)

Recently, however, the public tolerance for rape has begun to change as a handful of victims or their families have pressed charges against classroom molesters. The mother of the girl infected with herpes, for example, went to the police, which led not only to the dismissal of the 49-year-old teacher, but to a one-year prison sentence for him as well.

In an interview about the incident, the mother requested anonymity, as do most people involved in such cases. She said that if her identity were revealed, she would be ostracized and could even lose her job.

As if to underline the family's concern, the daughter has left Japan, fleeing the taunts of fellow students and the cold shoulder of teachers at her former school.

"Whose interests would it serve for us to go public?" said the mother, who asked not only that her name not be used, but that the name of her town, which is near Hayato, in western Japan, not be revealed. "We would have liked to receive solidarity from other people, but that is not how it works in Japan. I grew up in this community, and although a foreigner might not understand, it is a fact that the victim is always cast in a negative light."

This reality was vividly demonstrated in another recent molestation case in Osaka, where a 13-year-old girl insisted, against her parents' advice, on bringing charges against a 51-year-old teacher. In February, the man was fired and given a two-year prison sentence for fondling the girl in a school office, though more than 40 teachers, friends and colleagues signed a petition requesting leniency.

The victim's best friend told her she had ruined the teacher's life, according to one newspaper, The Mainichi Shimbun. When the girl answered that it was the other way around, the classmate replied: "Well, you are young. You have a second chance."

The victim told the court that after the teacher's arrest she became an object of ridicule.

"When I was at a supermarket, I was surrounded by some senior students I had never spoken to before," she said, according to the newspaper account. "They shouted, `That's the sexually harassed one!' and laughed at me."

The girl's family and lawyer would not agree to requests for further interviews. Ms. Kamei, who published books on sexual abuse under a pseudonym while she was a teacher, came to her field more than a decade ago, when an alarmed mother approached her to say that her 8-year-old girl was masturbating. It emerged that a teacher had been fondling the girl.

Ms. Kamei said that at the time, she and the mother merely insisted that the teacher be sent to another school. "Even today, if a prosecutor fails to bring an indictment, the teacher is completely off the hook," she said. "Even after administrative dismissal, some of these teachers find work in other schools in other districts, or even as volunteers with children, although some people estimate there is an almost 100 percent chance of recidivism."

There are no generally accepted statistics on classroom sexual abuse in Japan. According to figures compiled by the Education Ministry, which parents and advocates for victims say reflect vast underreporting, there were 27 cases of molestation by teachers in 1992, a number that included cases in which teachers themselves were victims.

By 2001, the most recent year for which statistics are available, the number of reported cases had risen to 122.

In Tokyo, an Education Ministry official minimized the extent of the problem.

"Compared to other issues such as bullying, truancy and school violence, the rate of incidence is not so high," said Yoshiyasu Tanaka. "Of course I don't think the official reporting shows everything, but still, this is not something that occurs in every school, whereas problems like bullying occur almost everywhere."

That is small comfort to the mother from the school near here. When asked whether she felt satisfied with the punishment meted out in her daughter's case, she paused and shook her head.

"It is a fact that he was punished, when lots of other cases are swept under the rug, but I can't say that we got 100 percent justice, either," she said. "One year in prison is too light. The disease given to my daughter wasn't taken into account. I just wonder what the judges were thinking about."

Kimpatsu
30th June 2003, 04:46
To start with the end of the article, Jody: "What were the judges thinking about?"
They were thinking how to better conceal their own sexual peccadillos. In Japan, the only real crime is to get caught. Sexual abuse is rife in this country. Given there is a direct correlation globally with accurate, unembarrassed sex education and healthy teenage sexual activity, can we not postulate that such education (or lack thereof) is the cause as well?
The above paragraph requires clarification. Countries with liberal sexual attitudes such as the Netherlands and Sweden have very low incidents of teenage pregnancy and other sexual crimes. (This is of course a trade-off, in that homosexuality is only a crime in countries where it is criminalised. This may seem a facile point, but it's an important one, as last week's case in Texas demonstrated.) Countries where moralistic authoritarians try to legislate against teenage sexual activity, or at least tut disapprovingly, suffer much higher rates of both teenage preganancy and STDs, because teenagers are unable to find the information and help that they need, so their understanding is skewed and their lack of knowledge staggering. (Storks bring babies, don't they?)
Which brings me back to Japan. In a country where there is no sex education in schools, kids get their information from pornographic manga. And, despite a campaign by concerned parents some years ago, my local 7-11 for one still stocks the porno manga on a shelf low enough to be reached by tiny fingers. Stories in these manga have common themes, one of which is a complete stranger molests a pretty, young woman (sometimes a schoolgirl, sometimes a nurse, sometimes an OL), and she loves it. So these sexually inadequate, pathetic dribbling individuals go out into the world thinking that all women are secretly gagging for it. And some of these individuals become teachers.
One final point, just to close the circle: we all know that the biggest crime of all in Japan is really to bring a situation--any situation-- to the police's attention. The cops hate to be bothered, and usually respond by arresting everyone in sight, and charging them with ridiculous crimes. In a country where they claim it's against the law to defend yourself against assault, what chance do these young women actually have? Drawing attention to a crime disturbs the tatemae that all is roses in the garden. But the honne is that those roses have thorns. And sometimes they sting.

CKohalyk
30th June 2003, 04:57
My gf/fiance/wife is involved in the women's movement here in Japan so I get an earful all the time. She works at the prefectural Women's center in Osaka and does the hotline counselling twice a week. (she was interviewed by a NY reporter last week :) )

I think the latest guess is 92% of rape victims are convinced not to press charges (and that's of the small percent who even report the crime)

Did you know that rape laws have not been changed since the Meiji period? And that you get a stricter punishment for stealing something?

Women are not treated as objects here... they are less than objects.

CK

Kimpatsu
30th June 2003, 04:58
Originally posted by CKohalyk
Women are not treated as objects here... they are less than objects.
That dovetails nicely withthe fact that gaijin are less than animals.

Jody Holeton
30th June 2003, 06:56
Hey Tony,

I have had 2 Japanese GFs who have told me horror stories about being molested here in Japan.

I really think Japan and Japanese people just don't talk about "political" or "awkward" things. Hiroshima and American pop music are EASY to spout about but things like Japanese crime, WW II and why Japanese men have a lack of courage....

Read that gang-rape article! My god! Lack of courage indeed!

Kimpatsu
30th June 2003, 07:10
Originally posted by Jody Holeton
Hey Tony,
I have had 2 Japanese GFs who have told me horror stories about being molested here in Japan.
I really think Japan and Japanese people just don't talk about "political" or "awkward" things. Hiroshima and American pop music are EASY to spout about but things like Japanese crime, WW II and why Japanese men have a lack of courage....
Read that gang-rape article! My god! Lack of courage indeed!
Courage can be defined in many ways, Jody. Hiroshima is a political issue, but good luck finding a Japanese who says, "Well we deserved it", or "it hastened the end of the war". No, what we get here is consensus. No one ever speaks out of turn (which is defined as airing a contrary view to the majority). Moral courage is standing up for what you believe in, but the last Japanese to do that to my knowledge, Professor Saburo Ienaga, died a while back. Meanwhile, Japanese schoolkids still don't know that the nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not the capricious actions of an evil American president, but the inevitable conclusion to a 4-year-old war. And their lack of sex education still sucks.

MarkF
30th June 2003, 12:37
I read a comment by two Japanese females, the first moaning and groaning about Hiroshima and Nagasaki. After the first women just went to far about roundeyes and suffering, the second lady said: "We lost! Get used to it."


Mark

A. M. Jauregui
2nd July 2003, 10:05
I am not surprised that rape is pushed aside, after all some in Japan still condone “help dates.” :redhot:

hyaku
2nd July 2003, 13:35
I took part in a forum last year organized by a big ladies group. I was a guest speaker and the general theme was what can we do about our Japanese men and what can we do to change the present system that treats women the way they do?

My advice was they could make a start by raising their boys differently. Why raise some totally undomesticated, arrogant, spoilt little brat in the first place? As most of the child raising is left to them with men hardly ever having anything to do with the kids, the wives have an excellent opportunity.

Hyakutake Colin

Jody Holeton
2nd July 2003, 22:45
The kids here are so spoiled!!!
They get put into meaningless classes, get passed no matter what and there is so little discipline...

In the last year I have taught from k-12. Screw the Japanese system! They just prep kids for tests! From watching my classes at play there is ALOT of homoerotic action going on!

This is just another thing the Japanese pass over and wont talk about.

hyaku
3rd July 2003, 00:37
For anyone that might not have read the news: The Japanese government will now allow people who have had a sex change operations to change the gender on their passports.

They anounced that "stiff" regulations for this! I assume when they said that they meant the women who had changed to men?

Hyakutake Colin

Kimpatsu
3rd July 2003, 01:08
That's a right cock-up, Colin. :D