The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Seoul flays Tokyo over disputed island claims in textbooks

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SEOUL: South Korea summoned Tokyo’s ambassador yesterday to protest over new educationa­l guidelines requiring high school students to be taught that disputed islands belong to Japan.

Seoul has controlled the islets in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) since 1945, when Tokyo’s brutal colonial rule on the peninsula ended.

Tokyo also claims the islands, known in Dokdo in South Korea and Takeshima in Japan, accusing Seoul of occupying them illegally.

South Korea and Japan are both market economies, democracie­s and US allies, and both are threatened by nuclear-armed North Korea, but their relationsh­ip is heavily strained by historical

We strongly condemn it and sternly call for its immediate withdrawal.

and territoria­l issues.

Tokyo yesterday approved guidelines requiring high school textbooks and teachers to tell pupils that the islands are Japan’s, mirroring measures applied last year in elementary and middle schools.

The guidelines, which are available on the ministry’s website, say schools should “introduce issues involving our country’s territorie­s, such as the Takeshima islands and Northern Territorie­s, being our country’s own territorie­s”.

The assertion was ‘unjustifia­ble’, Seoul’s foreign ministry said in a statement, saying Dokdo was an ‘inalienabl­e’ part of South Korea’s territory.

“We strongly condemn it and sternly call for its immediate withdrawal,” it added, saying Tokyo was trying to “instil a distorted historical perception about Dokdo into future generation­s”.

Japan is embroiled in a separate dispute with China over another set of islands, about which the guidelines said schools should “cover the Senkaku islands as our country’s own territorie­s and that there is no issue of territoria­l sovereignt­y to be resolved”.

Seoul and Tokyo tried to resolve a long-running feud over Japan’s wartime sexual slavery of Korean women with an inter-government agreement in 2015.

The controvers­y of the so-called comfort women – those forced into sexual slavery for Japanese troops during World War II – has marred relations between the two countries for decades.

Earlier this month, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said Japan cannot unilateral­ly declare the issue ‘over’, repeating calls for Tokyo to apologise.

Japan has protested against changing the deal, which was agreed to by Moon’s predecesso­r Park Geun-hye, saying any attempt to modify or scrap it could negatively affect relations. — AFP

Seoul’s foreign ministry

 ??  ?? Japan’s Ambassador to South Korea Yasumasa Nagamine arrives at the Foreign Ministry in Seoul. — AFP photo
Japan’s Ambassador to South Korea Yasumasa Nagamine arrives at the Foreign Ministry in Seoul. — AFP photo

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