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90% in Japan feel discrimination against disabled exists: survey

Kenta Kambara, 34, shows his daughter Shiori, 2, Tokyo 2020 Paralympics posters displayed at a subway station in Tokyo, Japan, February 22, 2020. Kambara who was born with spina bifida, a disorder that paralysed his lower body, aims to perform at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics opening or closing ceremonies. 'I'd already come to terms with my disability before I began dancing so it's not as if dancing 'saved' me. But before I started dancing, I often felt my wheelchair was cumbersome in my daily life ...But when it comes to dancing, I feel my use of a wheelchair makes it unique,' Kambara said. 'Disabilities have a negative image, but when it comes to dance, this is something only I can do.' REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon SEARCH 'WHEELCHAIR DANCER' FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.

Tokyo, 12 March, /AJMEDIA/

Nearly 90 percent of people in Japan believe discrimination and prejudice against those with disabilities continue to persist, according to a recent government survey.

The survey conducted last year found 88.5 percent responded discrimination against such people either “exists” or “exists to a certain extent,” despite the holding of the Tokyo Paralympics in 2021, according to the results released by the Cabinet Office late February.

The figure was higher than the 83.9 percent of people who responded similarly in the previous survey, conducted using different methods in 2017 and held a year after a law to ban discrimination against people with disabilities came into force.

Among respondents who said there was prejudice and discrimination in the study, conducted in November and December 2022, 58.9 percent said they feel there has been an improvement over the last five years, while 40.4 percent responded that there had not.

The law, designed to prevent discrimination against disabled people, was enacted in 2013 and enabled Japan to ratify the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities the following year, designed to protect their human rights and ensure their fundamental freedoms.

The law was revised in 2021 and obliges private companies to accommodate people with disabilities by implementing measures such as setting up sloped access points for wheelchairs and communicating with people who have hearing impairments by means of writing.

But only 24.0 percent responded they were aware of the law, while 74.6 percent said they did not know about it.

“We want to continue promoting awareness regarding the law for eliminating discrimination,” said a Cabinet Office official.

The survey was conducted by mail, with questionnaires being sent to 3,000 people aged 18 and older, resulting in 1,765 providing valid responses. The previous survey in 2017 was conducted by interview.

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