New Straits Times

MOON MEETS FORMER ‘COMFORT WOMEN’

He says 2015 deal is seriously flawed, with the women wanting Japan to take responsibi­lity

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SOUTH Korean President Moon Jae-in yesterday met women who were forced to work in Japanese wartime brothels, days after their plight again cast a shadow over relations with Japan.

A South Korean panel set up to investigat­e a 2015 agreement with Japan on the thousands of girls and women forced to work in Japan’s military brothels, euphemisti­cally termed “comfort women” by Japan, said the deal failed to meet their needs.

Moon said the 2015 deal, under which Japan apologised to victims and provided 1 billion yen (RM35 million) to a fund to help them, was seriously flawed.

Japan said any attempt to revise it could damage relations.

Eight of the women met Moon for lunch at the presidenti­al compound, known as the Blue House, here, the president’s office said in a statement.

“We told you the previous government’s agreement was wrong and this issue has not been resolved,” Moon told one of the women before the lunch.

“It is not an easy situation to handle within our bilateral relationsh­ip.”

The Blue House said Moon wanted to gauge the women’s reaction to his government’s position on the deal.

Moon visited one of the women, Kim Bok-dong, separately in the morning as she was ill and unable to attend the lunch.

“We survived when bullets were raining down and we will be able to get through this,” Kim told Moon, his office said.

The women want Japan to take legal, binding responsibi­lity for its actions and Kim was scornful of the 2015 payout.

“The money should be sent back to Japan,” she said.

South Korean activists estimate that there may have been as many as 200,000 Korean women forced to work in the brothels.

As of December, there are at least 32 surviving, according to a South Korean civic group set up to look after their rights.

It was the second time former “comfort women” visited the Blue House during Moon’s presidency after one was invited to a dinner when United States President Donald Trump visited in November.

Moon’s announceme­nt on the Japanese deal last week raised consternat­ion in Japan, where media reported that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe might decide not to visit the South for the Winter Olympics next month.

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said yesterday it would seek final measures on the issue as quickly as possible, with a ministry official saying that the measures would be finalised as early as next week.

Strained ties came as the US allies were trying to cooperate on security in the face of North Korea’s nuclear and missile developmen­t. Reuters

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in meeting Kim Bok-dong, who was abducted to serve as a “comfort woman” for wartime Japanese soldiers, at a hospital in Seoul yesterday.
REUTERS PIC South Korean President Moon Jae-in meeting Kim Bok-dong, who was abducted to serve as a “comfort woman” for wartime Japanese soldiers, at a hospital in Seoul yesterday.

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