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Tokyo ward 1st in Japan to recognise same sex marriage

TOKYO — Mr Fumino Sugiyama will finally be able to marry his girlfriend of four years. He couldn’t before, because same sex marriages weren’t recognised in Japan, and he is legally a woman.

Ms Koyuki Higashi, right, and her partner, Ms Hiroko Masuhara, left, holding a banner reading: "Congratulations: the same sex partnership ordinance" speak to the media in front of Shibuya ward office in Tokyo. Photo: AP

Ms Koyuki Higashi, right, and her partner, Ms Hiroko Masuhara, left, holding a banner reading: "Congratulations: the same sex partnership ordinance" speak to the media in front of Shibuya ward office in Tokyo. Photo: AP

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TOKYO — Mr Fumino Sugiyama will finally be able to marry his girlfriend of four years. He couldn’t before, because same sex marriages weren’t recognised in Japan, and he is legally a woman.

With a landmark vote today (March 31) by the assembly of Tokyo’s Shibuya ward, the district famous as a mecca for trendy youngsters became the first locale in Japan to recognise same sex partnerships as the “equivalent of a marriage”, guaranteeing the identical rights of married couples, including hospital visitations and apartment rentals.

Mr Sugiyama, who runs a couple of restaurants, welcomes the move as a key step in starting a long-needed debate about LGBT issues in Japan — a culture that values harmony so much that being different can get downright traumatic.

“We are not out to change the world,” said Mr Sugiyama, 33, who knew of his male identity since he was in kindergarten and had cried as a child because he didn’t want to wear a skirt. “We simply want the right to be with the person we love.”

The new ordinance applies only to Shibuya, and it’s technically not legally binding, though violators will have their names posted on the ward’s website.

Shibuya — an area with a population of 217,000, including 9,000 foreigners — is also planning an aggressive educational campaign on LGBT issues.

Japanese conservatives, including the powerful politicians of the ruling party, have been unwilling to back the initiative, and protest rallies have popped up in Shibuya.

“A great social ramification will be expected from such a decision,” Ms Mari Sato, a ruling party ward legislator opposed to the move, told the assembly ahead of Tuesday’s vote. “We need much more time to discuss this issue.”

The vote passed, with the majority of the 34 ward’s legislators standing up to show their approval.

Many Japanese lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people keep their sexual orientation secret for fear of a social backlash, so the number of people who will take advantage of the change is unclear. But Shibuya is expecting an influx of gay and lesbian people.

The first certificates are expected to be issued in July.

Shibuya ward Mayor Toshitake Kuwahara says accepting diversity matches the friendly, vivacious character of the area — a bustling place known for boutiques, live music and a Silicon Valley-like cluster of start-ups.

He says young “sexual minorities” live in fear, worrying about their future and grappling with self-doubt. “This is the reality,” Mr Kuwahara told reporters recently. “The purpose is to realise a society where everyone can live in hope.”

Ms Koyuki Higashi and Ms Hiroko Masuhara, a rare visible and vocal lesbian couple in Japan, emerged from the Shibuya ward office today, holding up a rainbow banner that said, “Thank you, Shibuya”, in English.

The couple said they moved to Shibuya four months ago, just to apply for a same sex marriage certificate. They have been together for three years, and held a symbolic wedding at Tokyo DisneySea two years ago.

“To marry the same sex is no different from marrying the opposite sex,” said Ms Higashi, 30, adding that she clutched Ms Masuhara’s hand in joy the moment the ordinance passed.

Mr Sugiyama, who was also in Shibuya to celebrate, acknowledged the ordinance was just a beginning.

He had struggled growing up as a transgender in Japan, and said he hated going to an all-girls school. He never thought of himself as female, even when he was on the Japanese national women’s fencing team.

It was when he was volunteering, sweeping the streets, that he was befriended by a Shibuya ward legislator. Pretty soon, LGBT people were flocking to the volunteer project from all over Japan.

That gradually started raising awareness, recalled Mr Sugiyama, who co-heads an LGBT advocacy group called Tokyo Rainbow Pride.

Mr Sugiyama has had sex reassignment surgery, but under Japanese law he is categorised as a female. This means he would not be able to marry a woman under national law, which does not recognise same sex marriages.

He now can — in Shibuya.

Still, Mr Sugiyama, who said he plans to have children, turned tearful, reflecting back on the years of pain, especially those he knew who had killed themselves, unable to bear the suffering. He was merely asking society to accept the LGBT lifestyle as an option, he said.

“We are not trying to take away the right of heterosexual couples,” he said. “It is society that must change, not us.” AP

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