The Borneo Post

Moon calls for Japan apology for WWII sex slavery

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SEOUL: South Korean President Moon Jae-In yesterday called for a ‘heartfelt apology’ from Japan to the victims of wartime sex slavery, condemning a 2015 agreement as a ‘wrongful’ solution.

Seoul said this week that it would not seek to renegotiat­e the deal, as it had been agreed by both Tokyo and the previous South Korean government.

But it said it would no longer use Japanese money to compensate the survivors.

The issue of women forced into sexual slavery for Japanese troops in World War II has roiled relations between the neighbours — both of them US allies and both threatened by nuclear- armed North Korea — for decades.

Thedeal on theso-called“comfort women” should not have been struck without the involvemen­t of the victims, Moon told a New Year press conference.

“This issue cannot be resolved through a give- and- take deal between government­s struck over the victims’ head,” he said.

“A wrong knot has to be untied. Japan should accept the truth, make a heartfelt apology to victims.”

Doing so would enable the survivors to forgive it for its past wrongs, he added.

The agreement was finalised by now- ousted president Park Geun- Hye under pressure from Washington in the face of mounting security threats from North Korea.

Under the deal, South Korea

This issue cannot be resolved through a give-and-take deal between government­s struck over the victims’ head. Moon Jae-In, South Korean President

promised not to raise the issue again and Japan transferre­d 1 billion yen (now US$ 8.9 million) to a foundation dedicated to supporting the victims.

Tokyo has reacted angrily to comments on the issue this week by Seoul.

Yoshihide Suga, the top Japanese government spokesman and the Chief Cabinet Secretary, said yesterday:

“Japan can never accept it if the South Korean side demands we take further measures despite the agreement that confirmed the final and irreversib­le solution on the issue.”

Moon had lambasted the agreement on the campaign trail and was elected president in May after Park was impeached over a massive corruption scandal.

But he said yesterday: “The fact that there was an official agreement between Korea and Japan cannot be denied. It is also important to deal with Korea’s relationsh­ip with Japan carefully.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Protestors sit next ot the statue (left) of a teenage girl symbolisin­g former ‘comfort women’, who served as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during World War II, during a weekly anti-Japan rally near the Japanese embassy in Seoul — AFP photo
Protestors sit next ot the statue (left) of a teenage girl symbolisin­g former ‘comfort women’, who served as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during World War II, during a weekly anti-Japan rally near the Japanese embassy in Seoul — AFP photo

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