Transgender people must be STERILISED before having their gender changed on passports in Japan 

Transgender people will have to be STERILISED before having their gender changed on their passports in Japan

  • The Supreme Court issued the decision to uphold the gender law on Wendesday
  • The law requires people to have no functioning reproductive glands to swap sex
  • Transgender man Takakito Usui appealed the law but it was ruled constitutional

Japan’s Supreme Court ruled against Takakito Usui (pictured) who appealed a law that effectively forces people with gender identity disorder to undergo surgery if they want to officially register a change in their sex

Japan’s supreme court has upheld a law that effectively requires transgender people to be sterilised before their gender can be changed on official documents.

The court acknowledged ‘doubts’ were emerging over whether the rule reflects changing social values, but said the law was constitutional.

The decision, issued Wednesday but published on Thursday, upholds a law that requires any individual wishing to change their documents have ‘no reproductive glands or reproductive glands that have permanently lost function,’ referring to testes or ovaries.

It also requires the person to have ‘a body which appears to have parts that resemble the genital organs of those of the opposite gender.’

The appeal was filed by Takakito Usui, a 45-year-old transgender man who wants to change official documents that identify him as female.

The panel of four justices ruled unanimously to throw out Usui’s appeal, declaring the law constitutional.

They said the measure was intended to prevent ‘problems’ in parent-child relations that could lead to societal ‘confusion’ and ‘abrupt changes’ in society.

The judges said they recognised the invasive nature of the law, adding that legislation should be regularly reviewed as social and family values change.

In an additional opinion, presiding justice Mamoru Miura joined another justice to say that while the law may not violate the constitution, ‘doubts are undeniably emerging’.

45-year-old Takakito Usui (right) wished to register as a male without undergoing resassignment surgery. But he has lost his appeal after the Supreme Court ruled the law was still constitutional 

45-year-old Takakito Usui (right) wished to register as a male without undergoing resassignment surgery. But he has lost his appeal after the Supreme Court ruled the law was still constitutional 

The existing law effectively requires transgender people to be sterilised before their gender can be changed on official documents, such as passports 

The existing law effectively requires transgender people to be sterilised before their gender can be changed on official documents, such as passports 

‘Suffering related to gender, felt by people with gender identity disorder, is also the problem of society as a whole, which should encompass the diversity of sexual identity,’ the additional opinion said.

The ruling ends Usui’s legal battle, but his lawyer said parts of the decision could boost a campaign to press lawmakers to change the rule.

‘In this day and age, I can’t believe there is a law that requires people to have surgery,’ Tomoyasu Oyama told AFP.

‘We have been at this case for two years. And every month, every six months, we can see an improved understanding of the issue by society,’ Oyama said.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk