Most of the comments in the articles on “the
utilization of women” are made by female managers or entrepreneurs. This issue
influences these women directly.
I just wondered why they don’t ask female
part-time workers and temporary workers. So I asked the reporter, and he said, “Now
that you mention it, it makes me wonder too.”
He told me that the business news desk
dealt with it because it was a labor issue. The newspaper company seems
vertically divided like the administrative functions.
But the political desks should also discuss
the government’s policies. Their policies include labor and welfare policies.
If they don’t examine the issues and just write what politicians say, they should
be called “the politicians’ desks” or “the government’s desks.”
I heard that the government is monitoring the mass media, but they
didn’t complain about my comment. I guess that’s because the comment reflects
nothing but the reality.
******************
Abe Considers Women as the “Convenient
Workforce”
Prime Minister Abe intends to “utilize
women” in the workforce. But he aims to take advantage of them conveniently and
actually shows no respect for women’s rights. With the overall workforce
running short because of the declining birthrate, women are the last resource
the government can use. Abe’s method of “utilizing women” is to force women who
are capable of doing so to work as hard as a man, while those who are
family-oriented are employed as temporary workers and then thrown away like
disposable items.
The Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women in the UN has long been recommending the Japanese
government to let couples have separate surnames and to eliminate the discrimination
against illegitimate children. However, the LDP has neglected this. In
particular, the Abe administration is one of the most rightist governments that
Japan has ever had. It asserts firmly that “a family is the foundation of the
nation.” They railroaded the Act on the Protection of Specially Designated
Secrets. This fact seems to show that the LDP is getting even less and less liberal.
Abe advocates the amendment of the Public
Office Election Act to raise the proportion of female lawmakers in the Diet,
but it can only be achieved if more women run office. Why can he tell companies to name more
women to be executives when he is reluctant to make such little effort himself?
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Original Article Written by Chizuko Ueno (http://wan.or.jp/ueno/?p=3734)
Tranlated by N. Tajima
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