Tokyo: A social media campaign against Japanese employers forcing women to wear high heels to work has drawn support from tens of thousands of people, including over 15,000 signatures on an online petition on Thursday.
Yumi Ishikawa, a 32-year-old actress and model, started the protest movement by tweeting a message in January about suffering from wearing heels every day. It has received around 100,000 likes or retweets, reports Efe news. “I want to lose the custom that a woman must wear heels and pumps at work some day. Why do I have to work while my feet hurt,” she tweeted.
Following the huge wave of support, she created the hashtag #KuToo — a mixture of “kutsu” (shoe in Japanese) and “kutsuu” (pain), and a play on the universal #MeToo movement. Many women responded with messages describing their own experiences and expressing similar complaints, with some of them even posting pictures of sores on their feet caused by wearing heels on a daily basis.
Ishikawa then started a petition on Change.org with an aim to get support against firms differentiating between genders while establishing rules of etiquette for employees, and ending the custom of having to wear high heels due to their detrimental impact on health and productivity.