Toronto Star

Japan slams review of sex-slave deal

South Korean task force found procedural faults in ‘irreversib­le’ accord

- KANGA KONG AND ISABEL REYNOLDS BLOOMBERG

SEOUL— Japan reacted angrily after a South Korean government-backed panel said Wednesday that the countries’ two-year-old agreement over wartime sex slaves didn’t properly reflect the views of the women coerced into military brothels before and during the Second World War.

After a five-month review, the ninemember task force found procedural faults in what was hailed as an “irreversib­le” accord, adding that Japan didn’t voluntaril­y offer an apology. President Moon Jae-in’s govern- ment will finalize its stance at a later date on the agreement, which was reached under his predecesso­r.

“If the South Korean government tries to change an agreement that is already being put into practice based on this report, relations between Japan and South Korea will become unmanageab­le,” Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono said in a statement. “This is absolutely unacceptab­le.”

The results of the review threaten to once again ignite the decades-long dispute between the U.S. allies at a time when closer military and political co-operation is needed in the face of rising North Korean nuclear threats.

The two Asian economic powerhouse­s have a fractious relationsh­ip, compounded by competing claims over islets in the sea between the countries.

“Issues related to universal values and historical recognitio­n like the comfort women cannot be resolved merely by a political agreement through short-term diplomatic discussion­s,” panel chairman Oh Taikyu told reporters.

South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said Wednesday the government’s final decision would hinge on opinions from victims, entities and experts, and also consider any potential consequenc­es. She said a day earlier that victims are unsatisfie­d with the deal, and 70 per cent of South Koreans don’t accept it.

In December 2015, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made a landmark apology to South Korean “comfort women,” with his government agreeing to provide one billion yen ($11.2 million) to a fund for compensati­ng victims. At the time, the then foreign ministers of both countries called the deal “irreversib­le.”

Brad Glosserman, a visiting professor at Tama University in Tokyo, said that there’s too much at stake for both countries to rip up the deal.

“Moon has to find a way forward that doesn’t look like a sop to the victims, while avoiding alienating the Japanese,” he said. “

Historians estimate anywhere from 50,000 to 200,000 women — many of them Korean — served in Japan’s military brothels. Japan apologized in 1993 and set up a compensati­on fund that was rejected by some victims because it was privately funded.

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Women sit in silent support Wednesday with a statue of “comfort woman” commemorat­ing the death of eight wartime sex slaves this year in Seoul.
JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Women sit in silent support Wednesday with a statue of “comfort woman” commemorat­ing the death of eight wartime sex slaves this year in Seoul.

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