Lawmakers with disabilities take seats in parliament

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Wheelchair-bound Japanese lawmakers Eiko Kimura (top-2nd right) and Yasuhiko Funago (top right) attend the opening ceremony of an “Extraordinary Diet” session at the Upper House plenary hall in Tokyo. Photo: AFP

TOKYO: Two lawmakers with serious paralysis took their seats in Japan’s upper house yesterday to cheers from supporters, marking the first time people with severe disabilities have served in the body.

Yasuhiko Funago and Eiko Kimura won seats last month in the country’s upper house election and their use of special reclining wheelchairs has required modifications to the Japanese parliament.

The pair both rely on caretakers for support, and their election has highlighted the fact that Japan only pays for such care if the disabled person is not working.

The lawmakers and disabled rights activists say this effectively penalises those with disabilities who want to work.

Wheelchair-bound Japanese lawmakers Eiko Kimura (top-2nd right) and Yasuhiko Funago (top right) attend the opening ceremony of an “Extraordinary Diet” session at the Upper House plenary hall in Tokyo. Photo: AFP

Japan’s upper house has agreed to pay for Funago and Kimura’s caretakers, but the new lawmakers want the rules changed more broadly.

“It will take a long time to change the system, but we will work hard in parliament to correct this big problem,” Kimura told cheering supporters outside the Diet building as the new parliament session began.

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“I am surprised that so many people came here,” added Funago, speaking with help from his
caretaker.

“I will do my best to live up to everyone’s expectations.”

A special temporary ramp allowed the lawmakers to ceremonially enter through the main gate of the Diet, opened only on these special days.

But to reach the main chamber, they had to re-enter through a back door to access the only elevator.

Diet officials have said they will do their best to accommodate the new lawmakers but warned there were limits.

“It’s technically difficult to install a slope and lift connecting the main entrance to the chamber…because the building is very old, built when the word ‘barrier-free’ was unknown,” a parliament official told AFP.

But other accommodations have been made, including
removing seats to make space for the special reclined wheelchairs used by the lawmakers and changing the rules to allow their caretakers to be present during sessions.

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The renovations have so far cost 880,000 yen. 

The two lawmakers, who won seats on the ticket of a newly formed small opposition party, are both largely paralysed from the neck down.

Funago, 61, is the first person with ALS to be elected to the national parliament. He cannot speak and communicates by blinking to his caretaker or using a computer system operated by his mouth.

Kimura, 54, is paralysed from the neck down except for her right hand.

Japan’s cabinet office says there are 9.63 million people in the country with physical, mental, or intellectual disabilities.

But while the country is preparing to host the Paralympics next year, some activists say people with disabilities remain marginalised in Japan and have hailed Funago and Kimura’s election as a win for representation and visibility of the community. – AFP

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