A Japanese court has found three ex-soldiers guilty of sexually assaulting a female colleague.
The landmark verdict comes after Rina Gonoi, 24, caused a public outcry and drew international attention when she put her story on YouTube in 2022.
Fukushima prosecutors then brought charges against the three men in March, reversing their earlier decision.
Speaking out against sexual violence in deeply conservative Japan is rare and remains a taboo.
Many such incidents go unreported and the topic has only gained national attention in recent years in the wake of high-profile cases such as Ms Gonoi, Shiori Ito’s court battle and the Johnny Kitagawa expose.
“The ruling today proves what they did was a crime – so I want them to face up to it and reflect on their actions. And I hope that this verdict will encourage victims to speak out,” Ms Ganoi told reporters outside court.
This is the first major verdict on sexual assault in Japan since June when the country overhauled its sex crime laws, which included redefining rape and raising the age of consent.
It was the result of years of activism following a series of controversial court rulings that acquitted alleged attackers. Activists say the previous laws often deterred survivors from speaking up.
“While there are still areas of improvement within society, today’s ruling is a welcome sign that the voices of survivors of sexual violence in Japan will not go unheard, and that accountability for such rights abuses is possible,” Kanae Doi, Japan Director at Human Rights Watch told the BBC.
“A 2021 government survey showed that about six percent of assault victims – both men and women – went to the police, while nearly half of [the female] respondents said they could not because of ’embarrassment’.”
In August 2021, three male colleagues pinned Ms Gonoi to a bed, forcibly spread her legs open and alternately and repeatedly pressed their crotches against her.
She earlier told the BBC that while around a dozen other colleagues were also present at the time, no one stopped the trio: “Many were laughing.”
Ms Gonoi reported the incident to her superiors but her complaint was dismissed as she was unable to obtain any witness testimony.
Later, the three men were referred to prosecutors on suspicion of indecent assault by the Ground Self-Defence Force (GSDF) police unit, but the case was dropped for lack of evidence. Ms Gonoi eventually left the army.
Her YouTube video went viral last year and she collected more than 100,000 signatures for a petition calling on the defence ministry to investigate her case. The ministry later apologised to her and launched a rare investigation that officials said found more than 100 other complaints of harassment across the ministry.
Source: BBC
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