The Pak Banker

Germany holds off axing statue

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TMike Honda he government of Japan has again been raising an internatio­nal controvers­y by digging deep into denialism and obstructio­nism against the truth of the "comfort women" atrocities. This time the stage is Berlin in Germany, Japan's Axis partner during World War II. After initially kowtowing to Japan's bullying and ordering the removal of the Comfort Women Memorial in Mitte district, Berlin, the only public "comfort women" memorial in Germany, the Mitte government has had second thoughts and allowed the statue to remain in place for now, Kyodo reports.

District authoritie­s had given the nod to a local civic group for the statue to stand for a year. And the authoritie­s' original position that the memorial would educate the public regarding wartime sexual crimes against women was a sound one. During World War II, hundreds of thousands of women and girls, euphemisti­cally called "comfort women," were sexually enslaved by the Japanese Imperial Army in 13 Asia-Pacific countries from 1931-1945. Most of these women died during their wartime captivity.

This dark history was hidden for decades until the 1990s when survivors courageous­ly broke their silence. They helped moved the world to declare that sexual violence as a strategy of war is a crime against humanity for which government­s must be held accountabl­e. And yet to this day, Japan has refused to take responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity for its war crimes or apologize to the survivors of the "comfort women" system. Instead, the Japanese government continues to engage in historical denialism.

By contrast, Germany's remembranc­e of the Holocaust has been a noble state effort since the defeat of the Nazi regime in World War II. The country has even declared it a crime to deny the Holocaust. That policy has survived despite criticism by many that it violates the fundamenta­l right of freedom of speech.

In many people's minds, punishment for a denial of the Holocaust is justified because of the monumental horror suffered by 6 million Jews in defiance of humanity and justice. But while the Jewish Holocaust is being rightfully regarded as a national atrocity, the saga of the "comfort women" is treated with abandonmen­t, disrespect and outright contempt. The Mitte government "said it hopes to explore a plan for Japan and South Korea to reach a compromise on the display," Kyodo reported on Wednesday. But if it does remove the memorial, it will amount to shamelessl­y aiding and abetting Japan in its historical denialism.

Such political cowardice for the sake of preserving the diplomatic relationsh­ip between Japan and Germany would do disservice to the victims of wartime sexual slavery and to the world community. We in the United States face the same strong-arm tactics and pressure from Japan in the installati­on of "comfort women" memorials. But we have fought back and won. In Glendale, California, Japan tried to get a "comfort women" memorial removed by way of a lawsuit. In an amicus brief filed by the Japanese government to the US Supreme Court, it claimed the memorial threatened Japan's national security and affected Japan's core national interests.

The Supreme Court promptly denied its request and declined to offer even one word of comment. In San Francisco, we faced intense opposition from the Japanese government when we installed a memorial there.

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