Millennium Post

S Korea court rejects attempt to repeal Japan sex slave deal

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SEOUL: South Korea's Constituti­onal Court on Friday rejected a petition seeking the repeal of a 2015 deal with Japan settling a bitter dispute over Korean women enslaved for sex by the Japanese military during World War II.

A decision to spike the largely stalled deal could have complicate­d efforts by the two countries to resolve separate thorny trade and history disputes, which recently plunged their ties to the lowest point in decades.

Friday's ruling was in response to a petition by former sex slaves and their families who say the deal, which was made without their consent, undermined their dignity and infringed on their rights to participat­e in negotiatio­ns and seek fuller Japanese government compensati­on.

In a unanimous decision, the nine-judge panel ruled that the deal was a non-binding political agreement that didn't affect the victims' legal rights, such as the ability to seek official Japanese compensati­on.

It said the agreement did not receive parliament­ary approval or Cabinet council deliberati­ons in either country, necessary steps to make it a treaty. The court also said the deal was vague on the detailed steps required of each country and the consequenc­es they would face if they failed to implement them.

The issue of sex slaves, euphemisti­cally called "comfort women," has been a major source of friction between the two countries, both staunch US allies.

Historians say tens of thousands of Korean women were lured or forced into sexual slavery at Japanese militaryru­n brothels when the Korean Peninsula was under Japanese colonial rule in 1910-45.

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