TOKYO — A
Japanese prison that banned a
convict from wearing his glasses because they made him look “menacing” has come
under fire from lawyers who call the decision a rights violation.
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The jail in northern Japan stopped the prisoner
bringing in his half-rimmed specs — with a silver bar on top, and no visible
frame underneath — while serving his sentence, according to the Sapporo Bar
Association, which has issued a warning to the facility.
Tsukigata Prison disallowed the glasses because they
“lent a menacing aura” to the man that risked “intimidating and inviting
derision from” other prisoners, the association cited the jail as saying.
The style of eyewear in question “could have a bad
influence on his incarcerated life, by triggering undisciplined behavior such
as fights and bullying,” it said.
A prison official defended the move when contacted
by AFP.
“We believe there is nothing illegal or unjust in
the way we handled the situation,” the staff member said, declining to be named
due to the jail’s internal policy.
The prisoner, a man in his 40s who has since been
released, lived without glasses for months while jailed for a traffic law
violation, said the lawyers’ official warning, filed in June.
His eyesight was so bad that he ended up “bumping into
other inmates” and suffering “bouts of strong headaches”.
Sapporo Bar Association vice president Ayako Ito
told AFP this week that for people with limited vision, glasses can be
tantamount to “a body part”.
“For example, prisoners are entitled to spend their
days reading, but being deprived of glasses renders such an act difficult,
which violates their rights to maintain a minimum standard of cultured living”
as guaranteed by the Japanese constitution, she said.
Ito said it was just the latest instance of a prison
in Japan denying inmates access to glasses for various reasons.
Tsukigata Prison was also called out by the bar
association in 2020 after it rejected another prisoner’s request to use his own
Bvlgari glasses, which it deemed “too ostentatious”.
Strict rules in Japanese prisons have been
challenged before.
In October, a death-row prisoner in southern Japan’s
Fukuoka region reportedly sued the state, seeking to restore his right to use
colored pencils for drawings.
That prisoner saw art as a way to express his remorse, but a
rule change last year by the justice ministry led to colored pencils being
banned at detention centers.
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