Seoul cancels permit for new Japanese embassy building
SEOUL: Authorities in Seoul have cancelled the permit for a new Japanese embassy building citing construction delays, local officials said, 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 191045 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula, with forced labour and wartime sex slavery as 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 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 woman” 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 Geun-hye without consulting the Korean victims and disbanded a foundation set up with the Japanese funds.