An 18-year-old Japanese girl is suing her local government after her
school made her repeatedly dye her naturally-brown hair black, media
reports say.
The girl says she was told she would have to leave the high school near
Osaka if she did not comply with a rule requiring students' hair to be
black.
It is being reported that she says the dye damaged her hair and her scalp.
Kaifukan high school said its policy was to ban students from dyeing or bleaching hair.
The school's instruction to the girl to dye her hair was reportedly
despite her mother telling the school that she was born with brownish
hair.
Reports say the girl has not attended school since September last year.
She is said to be asking for $19,300 (£14,700) in damages. Local media
say that Osaka prefecture is asking the court to reject the claim.
Kaifukan's headteacher Masahiko Takahashi did not comment on the lawsuit.
Many Japanese schools have strict rules about appearance, including hair colour, the use of make up and the length of skirts.
Earlier this year a survey by the Asahi Shimbun newspaper found that
nearly 60% of high schools in the capital Tokyo asked students with
light-coloured hair for proof that this was natural, for example by
providing photographs of them as infants.
The newspaper said that discipline was seen as a strong selling point
for schools amid growing competition to attract new students given the
country's declining birth rate.
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