Osaka cuts ties with San Francisco over ‘comfort women’ statue
TOKYO: The Japanese city of Osaka has cut sister city ties with San Francisco over a statue in the US city memorialising women forced into sexual slavery.
Osaka had announced its plan to end the 60-year relationship in 2017, after San Francisco accepted the donated memorial to women forced into wartime sex slavery by Japanese forces. But the city took formal action earlier this week to end the ties, with mayor Hirofumi Yoshimura saying “our relations of trust have been destroyed.”
The decision was promptly rejected by San Francisco’s newlyelected mayor London Breed, who defended the statue as a tribute to all women who have endured “the horrors of enslavement and sex trafficking.”
“One mayor cannot unilaterally end a relationship that exists between the people of our two cities, especially one that has existed for over 60 years,” she said in a statement.
But officials in Osaka said the decision would stand.
“We have received mixed reactions from our citizens but a majority of them support the decision,” an Osaka official told AFP yesterday.
“We delivered our request through proper procedures, though we have not received any official reply,” he added.
“We have no plans to reconsider.”
Japan’s national government has also stepped in to urge San Francisco to reject the memorial, which bears an inscription referring to “hundreds of thousands of women and girls ... sexually enslaved by the Japanese Imperial armed forces in 13 AsianPacific countries from 1931 to 1945.” — AFP