The Phnom Penh Post

Japan decries wartime sex slave statue likened to PM

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ASTATUE installed in a private garden in South Korea showing a man bowing to a sitting woman is stirring controvers­y both in Seoul and Tokyo, for its potential to further aggravate already fragile bilateral relations.

The installati­on work, entitled Eternal Atonement, has been erected on the grounds of the privately run Korea Botanic Garden in Pyeongchan­g city, Gangwon province.

The two-piece bronze sculpture features a man in a formal suit bowing on his knees in front of a seated woman.

The statue of the seated woman is in line with similar statues that symbolise Korea’s “comfort women”, a euphemism for girls and women used as sex slaves by Japan before and during World War II.

Local media linked the man in the artwork to Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, even dubbing it the “Abe statue”, although the sculpture itself appears to bear no resemblanc­e to the Japanese leader.

Angered by t he statue, Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secreta r y Yoshihide Suga on

Tuesday said if t he reports are true, it is “unacceptab­le in terms of internatio­na l courtesy” and would have a “decisive ef fect” on t he relationsh­ip bet ween the t wo neighbouri­ng countries.

Seoul’s foreign ministry reacted cautiously, saying “internatio­nal comity”, or courtesy, should be taken into account regarding the matter.

Foreign ministry spokespers­on Kim In-chul told a regular briefing: “The government believes it is necessary to consider internatio­nal comity in regards to foreign leaders.”

Asked if the government could take measures on works installed privately, Kim said the government would review the law.

Stung by the controvers­y and reactions from Seoul and Tokyo officials, the head of the botanical garden, however, cancelled a scheduled ceremony for its formal opening.

He also rejected the media’s interpreta­tions, saying the artwork was not installed specifical­ly with the Japanese leader in mind, but could be any other man making an apology.

The sculptor behind the statue has said to media that he wanted to say with the artwork that Japan must atone for wartime atrocities until it is forgiven by Korea.

The statue received divided opinions among the public here, with some saying it’s a piece of art and freedom of expression should be respected, while others have raised concerns on insulting a foreign leader amid the ongoing bilateral spat.

Seoul and Tokyo have long locked horns over the comfort women issue, where Japan maintains the matter as “finally and irreversib­ly resolved” by a 2015 agreement reached between then-President Park Geun-hye and Abe.

But the current Moon Jaein administra­tion declared that the agreement – where Japan apologised to the survivors and provided one billion yen ($9.5 million) to a fund to help the victims, in return for Korea’s promise not to raise the issue again – is critically flawed and had failed to respect the victims.

 ?? JIJI PRESS/AFP ?? Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said if the reports are true, the statue is ‘unacceptab­le in terms of internatio­nal courtesy’ and would have a ‘decisive effect’ on the relationsh­ip between the two neighbouri­ng countries.
JIJI PRESS/AFP Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said if the reports are true, the statue is ‘unacceptab­le in terms of internatio­nal courtesy’ and would have a ‘decisive effect’ on the relationsh­ip between the two neighbouri­ng countries.

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