Yahoo – AFP, 5 Nov 2015
A major Tokyo municipality started Thursday issuing "partnership" certificates to same-sex couples, as Japan takes gradual steps towards greater tolerance for sexual minority groups.
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Japanese
gay couple Hiroko Masuhara (R) and Koyuki Higashi display a certificate
of
'partnership', issued by the Shibuya ward office in Tokyo, on November 5, 2015
(Photo by Yoshikazu Tsuno / AFP)
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A major Tokyo municipality started Thursday issuing "partnership" certificates to same-sex couples, as Japan takes gradual steps towards greater tolerance for sexual minority groups.
Hiroko
Masuhara, 37, and Koyuki Higashi, 30, registered their "partnership"
with Shibuya ward, a major Tokyo district that is home to embassies,
international businesses and trendy fashion houses.
"As a
first step, I hope this will spread across Japan," said Higashi, a stage
actress by profession, amid intense media coverage in front of the Shibuya ward
office.
The
certificates are not legally binding and carry only symbolic significance since
the Japanese constitution identifies marriage as a union based on mutual
consent of the parties from "both sexes".
But the
official recognition of the same-sex unions is aimed at encouraging hospitals
and landlords to accept the certificate to try to ensure couples receive
similar treatment to people who are legally married.
The mayor
of nearby Setagaya district said it would also start issuing similar
certificates later Thursday.
While Japan
is largely tolerant of homosexuality there is no specific legal protection for
gay people, who complain that they may be prevented from visiting loved ones in
hospitals or may be refused tenancy because their relationship is not regarded
as in line with social norms.
"Heterosexual
couples and same-sex couples are really very much the same. It is unfortunate
that there are many things that cannot be done and cannot be recognised because
the number (of gay couples) is small," Higashi said.
"I
hope the day will come soon when there will be equality in society," she
added.
The
certificate issuance came amid other signs of a gradual acceptance of the
rights of same-sex couples by Japanese businesses.
Lifenet
Insurance said Wednesday it had expanded its services to recognise same-sex
partners as beneficiaries of life insurance contracts.
Mobile
phone carriers NTT DoCoMo and KDDI have also said in recent months that they
would expand family discount services to cover gay partners.
SoftBank,
another major mobile carrier, has offered family discounts to those who shared
addresses, regardless of their genders.


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