Tokyo, Japan – In a landmark verdict, Japan's Supreme Court has ruled in favour of a transgender bureaucrat who sued the government over access to female toilets at work.
In the judgment delivered on Tuesday, the court found that a decision barring the woman from using nearby toilets and forcing her to use others two floors from her office was “extremely lacking in validity”.
The move “overly accommodated other employees and unjustly disregarded how the plaintiff might be disadvantaged”, the court added.
The ruling is the Japanese top court's first on working conditions for LGBTQ people, and experts said it could change the way the public and private sectors navigate sensitive questions on women-only spaces.
The case was filed by a transgender woman in her fifties, who was told by her employer, the Ministry of Economy and Trade, that she could only use a women’s toilet two floors above her office.
She argued that being barred from the women’s toilets nearest to her deeply hurt her dignity and violated a law that protected state employees against loss or damage in the workplace.
The woman had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria in about1999, while already a government employee, and in 2009 told her supervisor she wished to dress and work as a woman.
The ministry approved some of her requests but insisted she could only use the women's toilets two floors from her desk.
Officials said the decision was justified because of a lack of public understanding towards transgender people using the facilities of their declared gender.
The decision was backed by a neutral body that arbitrates staff decisions in the government.
But in a hearing last month, the plaintiff's team argued that no female employees at the ministry had explicitly voiced any discomfort about sharing toilets.
Japanese law currently effectively requires transgender people to be surgically sterilised if they want legal recognition of their gender identity.
Those who wish to change their official documents must appeal to a family court and meet criteria including having no reproductive capacity –generally requiring sterilisation.
The plaintiff in the case has not changed her legal gender, but lives as a woman.
In 2019, the Tokyo District Court upheld her complaint, saying the ministry's treatment restricted important legal rights because of her gender identity.
But a higher court overturned the ruling in 2021 and backed the state, acknowledging its responsibility to consider the “embarrassment and anxiety” felt by others at the woman's use of the female toilets.
Earlier this year, Japan passed its first legislation ostensibly intended to protect the LGBTQ community from discrimination.
However, campaigners slammed the watered-down language in the bill, which only opposes “unjust discrimination”.
AFP