A Japanese woman who was forcibly sterilised as a teenager due to intellectual disabilities sued the government on Tuesday, seeking 11 million yen (101,149 dollars),compensation because her basic human rights had been trampled on.
Under Japan’s eugenics protection law, in force from 1948 to 1996, about 25,000 people were sterilised due to mental or genetic illnesses, Japanese media said.
They included leprosy sufferers and some with intellectual and cognitive disabilities.
About 16,500 of them are believed to have had the surgery without their consent.
The 60-year-old who sued had developed mental problems following surgery for a cleft palate as an infant and was diagnosed with an intellectual disability at 15, after which she was forcibly sterilised, media said, quoting court documents.
As the result of side-effects she later had to have her ovaries removed. Subsequently, marriage talks were broken off as a result of her inability to have children.
No further details were given, including the woman’s name.
“Thanks to the law, my sister has really suffered, living her life hidden away,” the woman’s sister told a news conference.
“We wanted to stand up and build a society where even people with disabilities can have a happy life.”
The woman said the government should have set up relief measures for those subjected to the surgery, in recompense for violating their human rights.
Health Minister Katsunobu Kato declined to comment, telling reporters he did not know the details of the case, but his ministry would investigate.
People with disabilities have long suffered shame and stigma in Japan, although anti-discrimination efforts have gathered pace since a law took effect in 2016.
That July, however, Japan was forced to confront its attitudes after a man went on a stabbing spree at a facility for disabled people near Tokyo, killing 19 as they slept and wounding 26.
He had previously threatened to “obliterate” disabled people.
Almost nothing about the victims was disclosed except for gender and age, mainly at the request of their families. (Reuters/NAN)