A Japanese court yesterday convicted three former soldiers in a sexual assault case that authorities had dropped until the victim, a former service member, came forward demanding a reinvestigation, prompting a militarywide harassment probe.
The Fukushima District Court sentenced the former Japanese army soldiers to two years in prison, but suspended the sentences for four years — meaning they would not actually serve time in prison.
Still, the ruling is a rare victory in a country that consistently ranks near the bottom in international gender equality surveys, and where sexual misconduct complaints are often disregarded and victims tend to face criticism for speaking up.
Photo: AFP
The case filed by Rina Gonoi in August 2021 was initially dropped. Nine months later, she came forward and demanded the case be reinvestigated, saying the experience caused her to give up her military career.
Gonoi said she has been attacked on social media for coming forward, but that she did so because she wanted to prevent similar problems for other female service members.
Gonoi welcomed the ruling, saying it would prevent other people from becoming victims.
“Many victims still cannot speak up, but now we have this verdict, and I hope that more people come out and speak up,” she told reporters.
Her revelation prompted a militarywide investigation into sexual harassment and other abuse allegations in September last year, and prosecutors reopened her case.
The Fukushima court said her three former supervisors — Shutaro Shibuya, Akito Sekine and Yusuke Kimezawa — each pressed the lower part of their bodies against her at an army training facility at a party in August 2021, and it found them guilty of indecent assault.
Judge Takaaki Miura dismissed their argument, saying they had obviously imitated sexual acts on her at a party where attendants were mostly men and intimidating.
By doing so, they denied her dignity and treated her like an object to ginger up the gathering, the judge said, calling their act “despicable and vicious,” according to NHK television.
The three defendants had pleaded not guilty, denying any intent of indecency even though they admitted to pushing her down onto a bed, NHK said.
“The ruling showed that such act for a laugh is not permissible, it’s clearly a crime,” Gonoi said.
In response to Gonoi’s revelations, the Ground Self Defense Force (GSDF) in September last year acknowledged some of the misconduct and apologized, and then fired five servicemen, including the three defendants, while punishing four others.
The three defendants at that time offered a written apology, which Gonoi later said lacked sincerity. The three men said during their criminal trial that they had apologized because the GSDF ordered them to do so, according to Kyodo News agency.
A panel of experts that investigated harassment cases in Japan’s military and the Defense Ministry said earlier this year it found widespread coverups and reluctance among supervisors to deal with the problems and recommended fundamental improvements.
Japanese Minister of Defense Minoru Kihara told reporters earlier yesterday that such harassment cannot be tolerated as servicemembers work together to strengthen Japan’s military capability.
Women comprise 8.7 percent of Japan’s military, which is the second lowest among the G7 nations. The number compares with more than 17 percent in the US, more than 16 percent in France and Canada, 13 percent in Germany and 6 percent in Italy.
Gonoi, who was inspired to join the army after surviving the March 2011 massive earthquake and tsunami in her hometown in Miyagi Prefecture as a child, was first assigned to a Fukushima unit in April 2020. However, she quickly became a target of sexual misconduct, she said. Her male superiors repeatedly asked about her breast size, hugged her and made unnecessary physical contact, such as trying judo techniques on her, Gonoi said.
Gonoi has separately filed a damage suit against the three defendants, two other perpetrators and the government, saying she felt their earlier apologies were insincere. She is seeking ¥5.5 million (US$37,869) from the perpetrators and ¥2 million from the government, saying it failed to prevent the assaults, properly investigate or respond appropriately.
Separately, an air force service member filed a lawsuit in February against the government seeking about ¥11.7 million in damages, saying it had failed to protect her from verbal sexual harassment from a male colleague and covered up the problem for more than a decade.
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