The Borneo Post (Sabah)

S. Korea to stick with Japan ‘comfort women’ deal

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SEOUL: South Korea will not seek to renegotiat­e a deal with Japan on wartime sex slavery, it said yesterday, despite new President Moon Jae-In saying on the campaign trail he ‘could not accept’ the agreement.

The issue of women forced into sexual slavery for Japanese troops during World War II is a hugely emotional one that has long marred ties between the South and its former colonial ruler.

Ousted president Park GeunHye sought to end the decades-long row with a 2015 agreement that included a Japanese apology and payment of one billion yen (US$8.8 million) to survivors.

But under the deal, Japan did not admit legal responsibi­lity for the abuses, drawing anger from some survivors who refused to take the money.

Ties between the two neighbours – both of them US allies threatened by nuclear-armed North Korea – remain tense over statues placed outside Japanese diplomatic missions by South Korean activists in memory of the victims.

Last month, Moon slammed the agreement as ‘seriously flawed’ and told officials to re-examine it.

But now Seoul’s foreign minister Kang Kyung-Wha has said it was an ‘undeniable fact’ that both government­s had formally endorsed it.

“Considerin­g that, our government will not demand renegotiat­ion of the deal,” Kang told reporters yesterday.

But Seoul will not use any more of Tokyo’s money for the survivors, replacing the funds from its own budget, Kang said, urging Tokyo to offer a ‘voluntary and sincere apology’.

The financial move seeks to take the moral high ground and avoid perception­s that Tokyo has settled the issue by way of reparation­s.

Japan has urged South Korea to stick with the 2015 deal, saying any attempt by Seoul to revise it ‘cannot be acceptable whatsoever’ and would leave bilateral ties ‘unmanageab­le’.

Tokyo’s foreign minister Taro Kono renewed a call for Seoul to “firmly implement the agreement as a final and irreversib­le one”, after Kang’s remarks on Tuesday.

“Amid efforts to address threats from North Korea, this agreement should be a crucial foundation for cooperatio­n between Japan and South Korea... for building a forward-looking bilateral relationsh­ip,” he told reporters.

It is the second time the leftleanin­g Moon’s government has avoided implementi­ng a campaign promise made to appeal to his base on practical grounds – a pledge to phase out nuclear power in the resource-poor South was outsourced to a ‘citizen jury’, which decided that the country needed atomic energy.

Mainstream historians say as many as 200,000 women – mostly from Korea but also other parts of Asia, including China – were forced to become sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during the war.

The Japanese government denies it is directly responsibl­e, insisting that ‘comfort women’ were recruited by civilians and that the army brothels were commercial­ly operated. — AFP

Amid efforts to address threats from North Korea, this agreement should be a crucial foundation for cooperatio­n between Japan and South Korea. Taro Kono, Japanese Foreign Minister

 ??  ?? Taro Kono
Taro Kono
 ??  ?? Kang Kyung-Wha
Kang Kyung-Wha

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