Japan is drawing up plans requiring all senior government bureaucrats
to undergo anti-sexual harassment training, an official said Thursday,
after a scandal involving a top finance ministry employee.
“We are now preparing such a plan,” a cabinet office official told
AFP, adding that a final version will be presented at a meeting headed
by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe later this month.
The move comes after the top bureaucrat at the Finance Ministry quit
in April following allegations he sexually harassed female reporters.
He denied the claims, but a ministry probe subsequently found the allegations credible and docked his retirement benefits.
The finance ministry was slammed for its poor handling of the case,
with Finance Minister Taro Aso initially dismissing the allegations and
officials later calling on victims to come forward publicly.
Earlier this week, a foreign ministry official in charge of Russian
affairs was suspended for nine months, with Japanese media widely
reporting he had been accused of sexual harassment.
Foreign Minister Taro Kono has declined to clarify why the bureaucrat was suspended, citing the privacy of “the victim.”
The training plan could be approved as early as next week at the
meeting entitled “Base for creating a society where all women shine,”
that Abe will head, the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper reported.
How many officials will be required to undergo the training remains
unclear, though some media reported it may become mandatory for
bureaucrats seeking promotion.
Abe has made increasing female participation in the workforce a key
plank of his economic policies as Japan struggles with a labour
shortage.
But the country ranked bottom among G7 countries in the World
Economic Forum’s latest “Global Gender Gap Report”, coming 114th
worldwide.
It scored poorly on women’s participation in the economy and political involvement.
The #MeToo movement has sometimes seemed to have skipped Japan,
though some observers said the outcry over the finance ministry case
suggested a reckoning could now happen in the country too.
The sexual harassment scandal at the finance ministry has proved an
additional headache for Abe, whose government is already under fire over
two cronyism scandals — one of which involves the scrubbing of
documents by the finance ministry.
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