TOKYO (AFP) – A person who had a sex-change to become a man has
complained of discrimination after a Japanese court refused to register
him as the father of his wife’s child, according to reports Saturday.
The 30-year-old, who was born female, had sought to be registered as
the father after his wife delivered a boy in 2009 by way of artificial
insemination using donated sperm.
But the Tokyo Family Court ruled the child must be registered as if
he was born out of wedlock as the man is
physically not capable of
reproduction — despite the fact sterile men are routinely recognised as
the fathers of babies born using artificial insemination.
The couple married in 2008, after the husband officially changed his
gender, and were recognised as husband and wife under a new law that
came into effect in 2004.
“Under the law, Japan decided to treat me as a man. I would like to
receive the same treatment as a father too,” the man, whose name was not
reported, told local journalists Friday, according to the Mainichi
Shimbun.
“I feel I am being discriminated against. I will continue to fight so
that I can live as a husband and a father,” he said, according to
national broadcaster NHK.
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