The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japan keeps close eye on incoming Yoon’s policies

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Some Japanese government o cials are welcoming the announceme­nt by the administra­tion of South Korean President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol that it will dispatch a policy delegation to Japan. is will be the second such dispatch for the Yoon administra­tion a er the United States, and is believed to indicate the incoming president’s desire to improve the bilateral relationsh­ip.

However, the Japanese government is also watching the new administra­tion closely, as there are many issues still unresolved between the two nations.

“Japan-South Korea relations are in a very harsh situation, and we can’t leave things as they are,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said at a press conference on Monday, referring to the issue of so-called comfort women and lawsuits involving former wartime requisitio­ned workers from the Korean Peninsula.

Japan-South Korean relations are thought to be at their worst level of the post-World War II era, as President Moon Jae-in essentiall­y negated the Japan-South Korea agreement that con rmed the resolution of the comfort women issue in 2018. e Moon administra­tion also did not deal with the lawsuits related to former wartime requisitio­ned workers.

ere has not been a face-to-face meeting between the two nations’ leaders since December 2019.

However, Yoon is aiming to improve relations with Japan. e president-elect announced his appointmen­t of Park Jin, a member of the National Assembly who is close to him and who has studied in Japan, as the next foreign minister. e Japanese government considers this and the dispatch of the delegation to be a “message aimed at improving relations” from the new administra­tion.

Amid concerns about the destabiliz­ation of the security environmen­t in East Asia due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, there are strong hopes with the Japanese government for heightened cooperatio­n between Japan and South Korea, as well as among Japan, South Korea and the United States.

However, it is di cult to resolve prolonged historical issues. is is particular­ly true with the issue of former wartime requisitio­ned workers — procedures are underway in South Korean courts to sell assets belonging to Japanese companies.

If the Yoon administra­tion does not deal with the situation, Japanese companies’ assets could be converted into cash as soon as by the end of this year.

e Japanese government is heightenin­g its vigilance. “Converting the assets to cash would go against the fundamenta­l truth that this issue was resolved under the Agreement on the Settlement of Problems Concerning Property and Claims and on Economic Cooperatio­n,” a foreign ministry o cial said. “e worst situation of the postwar period could become irrevocabl­e.”

e two nations are expected to exchange views on this and other matters during the delegation’s stay in Japan from April 24 to 28. As Yoon said he will “comprehens­ively” resolve issues between Japan and South Korea, the Japanese government is ready to nd out what solutions the Yoon administra­tion will devise. (April 20)

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