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Japan store reviews plan for staff to wear menstruation badges after outcry
People cross a busy intersection in Tokyou00e2u20acu2122s Shibuya shopping district on June 6, 2013. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

TOKYO, Nov 28 — A Japanese department store is reconsidering a plan for employees to wear badges when they’re menstruating, which was originally aimed at fostering sympathy among co-workers but triggered a public outcry.

The Daimaru Umeda department store in Osaka said today that it had hoped to encourage bonding by having menstruating staff wear a badge featuring an existing manga character named "Seiri Chan” — loosely translated as "Miss Period”.

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"We received many complaints from the public. Some of them concerned harassment, and that was definitely not our intention. We’re reconsidering plans now,” said a male executive who declined to be named. A spokesperson was not immediately available.

The backlash comes as cases of workplace harassment have come under the spotlight in Japan, amid a shrinking workforce and changing values about gender roles and work-life balance. Companies are increasingly and publicly being criticised for bullying and gender discrimination.

The Daimaru executive said the store had not intended to make the badge compulsory. — Reuters

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