China Daily

‘Comfort women’ demand justice

- By XINHUA in Manila

Former “comfort woman” Narcisa Claveria, 87, protests outside the Japanese embassy in Manila on Thursday, ahead of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s two-day visit to the Philippine­s, which started Thursday.

Filipino “comfort women” stagedapro­testonThur­sday in front of the Japanese Embassy in Manila ahead of the visit by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

The protesters urged Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to raise their plight in his meeting with Abe, who will visit Manila and Davao, Duterte’s home city.

Duterte, who visited Japan in October last year, will welcome Abe at the Malacanang presidenti­al palace, where a state banquet is planned, Duterte’s office said.

“We call on Duterte not to forget to bring up with Abe the still unaddresse­d demands by our fast aging and diminishin­g lolas (grandmothe­rs) for a formal apology from the (Japanese) government to all Asian comfort women and restitutio­n for the hurt they inflicted on thousands of women,” said Rechilda Extremadur­a, executive director of Lila Pilipina, an organizati­on that supports World War II comfort women.

“Our lolas also want Duterte to resist renewing the possibilit­ies of letting new Japanese troops conduct exercises, train local security forces and make bases in our country to avoid another brutal campaign of war and pillage.”

She also criticized previous Philippine administra­tions, accusing them of ignoring the plight of the Filipino women who were forced to work in Japanese military brothels as sex slaves during World War II.

Gabriela, a women’s organizati­on, also warned Duterte not to ditch the “comfort women” issue in favor of economic aid.

“Duterte should not take the so-called aid and loans as cosmetic beams to paper over the cries of comfort women for genuine justice and recognitio­n,” said Joms Salvador, secretary-general of Gabriela.

Like Bayan and Lila Pilipina, Gabriela also raised alarm over Japan’s plan “to return to its aggressive wartime stance”.

Dwindling number

Lila Pilipina (League of Filipino Women) has documented 174 “comfort women” who have gone public since the early 1990s. Only 70 of them remain alive, including Bustamante.

Another group, the Malaya Lolas (Free Grandmothe­rs), has documented 90 but the number has since dwindled to 33.

Both groups are demanding official apology, just compensati­on, and inclusion of the comfort women issue in Japan’s historical accounts and textbooks.

The Philippine government has so far avoided discussion of the issue in bilateral talks with Japan.

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BULLIT MARQUEZ / AP
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