Japan raises the age of sexual consent to 16 from 13, which was among the world’s lowest

Japanese lawmakers stand as they approve an amended criminal law in the Upper House in Tokyo on Friday, June 16.

TOKYO (AP):

Japan’s parliament on Friday raised the age of sexual consent to 16 from 13, a limit which had remained unchanged for more than a century and was among the world’s lowest, amid calls for greater protection of children and women.

The revision was part of a revamping of laws related to sex crimes. Separately, parliament passed a new law on Friday to increase awareness of LGBTQ+ issues, which activists criticised for not guaranteeing equal rights for sexual minorities.

Reforms providing greater protection for victims of sexual crimes and stricter punishment of assailants have come slowly in a country where the legislative and judicial branches have long been dominated by men.

Japan, in 2017, revised its criminal code on sexual crimes for the first time in 110 years. A series of acquittals in cases of sexual abuse and growing instances of sexual images taken of girls and women without their consent have triggered public outrage, prompting the new revisions.

The changes enacted on Friday make sexual intercourse with someone below age 16 considered rape. They specify eight scenarios of “consentless sex crimes,” a new term for forced sexual intercourse, including being assaulted under the influence of alcohol or drugs, fear, or intimidation.

They also ban the filming, distribution and possession of sexually exploitative images taken without consent.

The statute of limitations for sex crimes was also extended by five years, to 10 years, for consentless sexual intercourse. That crime is now subject to up to 15 years in prison, while “photo voyeurism” can be punished by up to three years’ imprisonment.

The changes were sparked in part by a case in Nagoya in which a father who raped his 19-year-old daughter was acquitted by a court, which ruled that while the daughter did not give her consent, she did not resist violently. The decision prompted nationwide protests.

Activists said the new LGBTQ+ law threatens them instead of promoting equality because of last-minute changes which apparently catered to opponents of transgender rights.

Japan is the only member of the Group of Seven leading industrialised nations which does not have LGTBQ+ legal protections.

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