The Borneo Post

Seoul cancels permit for new Japanese embassy building

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SEOUL: Authoritie­s in Seoul have cancelled the permit for a new Japanese embassy building citing constructi­on delays, local officials said yesterday, with relations between South Korea and Tokyo strained by historical disputes.

The neighbours are both democracie­s, market economies and US allies faced with an increasing­ly assertive China and the long-running threat of nuclear-armed North Korea.

But their own ties have remained icy for years due to bitter rows stemming from Japan’s brutal 1910- 45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula, with forced labour and wartime sex slavery key examples.

A statue of a “comfort woman” symbolisin­g the Korean women forced to work in Japanese military brothels mostly during World War II stands across the road from the embassy plot.

Since 1992 campaigner­s have held weekly rallies at the site to demand a “full, heartfelt apology” for wartime sex slavery from Tokyo.

The 1,382th such gathering took place Wednesday, with activists surroundin­g the statue.

The previous embassy building was demolished some years ago, with staff moving into offices in the neighbouri­ng high-rises, and the plot is now a patch of bare earth behind a high wall, vines growing through the surroundin­g barbed wire.

City authoritie­s gave permission for a new six- storey building in 2015, the year Seoul and Tokyo signed a controvers­ial deal to settle the wartime sex slavery issue.

But constructi­on – which under South Korean law must start within a year of a permit being received – was repeatedly delayed.

Japan argues that the “comfort women” statue is against the 2015 bilateral agreement, under which Tokyo offered an apology and a one-billion yen payment.

But South Korean President Moon Jae-in said last year that the deal had been signed by his ousted predecesso­r Park Geunhye without consulting the Korean victims and disbanded a foundation set up with the Japanese funds.

An official at the Jongno Ward Office in Seoul said: “We had a meeting with Japanese officials in February, and they said they will accept the revocation of the permit as they cannot start the constructi­on work due to circumstan­ces in their home country.”

The dovish Moon – who has brokered talks between Washington and Pyongyang – has stressed the struggle against Japan is at the heart of national identity in both Koreas.

This year marks the 100th anniversar­ies of the March 1 Independen­ce Movement and the foundation of the Korean provisiona­l government, and South Korea is pulling out the stops to commemorat­e them both.

The centre of the capital is currently festooned with large government-produced posters of heroes of the fight for independen­ce. — AFP

 ??  ?? South Korean protesters stand next to a statue of a teenage girl symbolisin­g former ‘comfort women’, who served as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during World War II, during a weekly anti-Japanese demonstrat­ion near the Japanese embassy in Seoul. — AFP photo
South Korean protesters stand next to a statue of a teenage girl symbolisin­g former ‘comfort women’, who served as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during World War II, during a weekly anti-Japanese demonstrat­ion near the Japanese embassy in Seoul. — AFP photo

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