Shanghai Daily

Moon slams Japan over ‘comfort women’

- (Reuters)

SOUTH Korean President Moon Jae-in described Japan’s wartime use of “comfort women” as a “crime against humanity” yesterday in some of his strongest comments yet.

Moon said during a speech marking a national holiday commemorat­ing Korean resistance to Japanese occupation, his first since taking office last year, that Japan was in no position to declare the emotionall­y charged issue settled.

“To resolve the comfort women issue, the Japanese government, the perpetrato­r, should not say the matter is closed,” Moon said.

“The issue of a crime against humanity committed in time of war cannot be closed with just a word. A genuine resolution of unfortunat­e history is to remember it and learn a lesson from it.”

His comments drew an immediate rebuke from Tokyo.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga described Moon’s comments as “extremely regrettabl­e.”

Japan and South Korea share a bitter history that includes Japan’s 191045 colonizati­on of the peninsula and the use of “comfort women,” Japan’s euphemism for women forced to work in its wartime brothels.

Japan apologized to the women and provided a 1 billion yen (US$9.4 million) fund to help them under a 2015 deal with Moon’s conservati­ve predecesso­r, but South Korea has recently sought to revisit the issue.

“These details were agreed by South Korea and Japan, and we find it unacceptab­le and extremely regrettabl­e,” Suga said.

Moon, speaking at the site of a former jail where Korean independen­ce fighters were imprisoned by Japanese forces, said South Korea was not looking for “special treatment” from Tokyo.

However, he hoped Japan pursued “sincere self-reflection” and “squarely face the truth of history and justice with the universal conscience of humanity.”

Japan also formally complained on Monday after South Korea’s foreign minister raised the issue at the top UN rights body, warning that it should not be allowed to harm bilateral relations at a critical time in East Asia.

A South Korean panel set up to investigat­e the deal concluded late last year that the agreement failed to meet the needs of the thousands of girls and women forced to work as sex slavers in Japan’s military brothels.

Over the objections of some in his conservati­ve base, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe went to visit South Korea during last month’s Winter Olympics, but restated Tokyo’s opposition to revising the 2015 agreement.

Moon said South Korea considered Japan one of its closest neighbors and hoped to be able to move forward together.

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