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Japan’s health, labour and welfare minister Takumi Nemoto
Japan’s health, labour and welfare minister, Takumi Nemoto, said it was ‘appropriate’ that women wear heels in the workplace. Photograph: Issei Kato/Reuters
Japan’s health, labour and welfare minister, Takumi Nemoto, said it was ‘appropriate’ that women wear heels in the workplace. Photograph: Issei Kato/Reuters

High heels at work are necessary, says Japan's labour minister

This article is more than 4 years old

Ministry responds to #KuToo petition calling for end to women having to wear heels at work

Japan’s health and labour minister has defended workplaces that require women to wear high heels to work, arguing it is “necessary and appropriate” after a petition was filed against the practice.

The remark came when Takumi Nemoto was asked to comment on a petition by a group of women who want the government to ban workplaces from requiring female jobseekers and employees to wear high heels.

“It is socially accepted as something that falls within the realm of being occupationally necessary and appropriate,” Nemoto told a legislative committee on Wednesday.

The petition was submitted to the labour ministry on Tuesday. The campaign has been dubbed #KuToo, a play on words from the Japanese word “kutsu”, meaning shoes, and “kutsuu”, meaning “pain”. It is also a reference to the global #MeToo movement against sexual abuse.

The movement was launched by the actor and freelance writer Yumi Ishikawa and quickly won support from thousands of people online.

Campaigners say wearing high heels in Japan is near-obligatory when job hunting or working in many Japanese companies.

Some campaigners describe high heels as akin to modern-day foot-binding, while others have urged a broader loosening of dress codes in Japan, where business suits for men are ubiquitous in the workplace.

In 2015, the director of the Cannes film festival apologised after a controversy blew up over women being denied access to the red carpet for not wearing high heels. But Cannes kept the dress code, despite a protest by the Hollywood superstar Julia Roberts who went barefoot the next year.

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