Daily Dispatch

Japan in ‘comfort women’ spat

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JAPAN has lodged a diplomatic protest with South Korea over its support for registerin­g with the United Nations documents related to “comfort women” forced into World War 2 sexual slavery by Japanese troops, officials said yesterday.

The reaction comes after Seoul’s gender equality minister on Monday expressed support for efforts to include the papers in the “Memory of the World” register of the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (Unesco).

The plight of the women is a hugely emotional issue that has marred ties between the US allies for decades.

Washington is keen for it not to hamper cooperatio­n against North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes. Mainstream historians say up to 200 000 women – mostly from Korea but also other parts of Asia including China – were forced to work at Japanese military brothels across the region during the conflict.

Japan, which ruled the Korean peninsula as a colony, was at war with China from 1937 and with the United States, Britain and other countries from 1941. The war ended with Japan’s surrender in 1945.

Backing the registrati­on of the documents “could go against the original mission and purpose of the establishm­ent of Unesco of fostering friendship and mutual understand­ing among member countries,” Japanese foreign minister Fumio Kishida told reporters.

“We strongly conveyed our position to the South Korean government,” he said.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, the government’s top spokesman, also said Japan had “sent a strong message” to Seoul.

Chung Hyun-Back, the gender equality minister, hit back through her spokesman, saying the government would push through with the document registrati­on as well as with a project she announced on Monday to build a museum in memory of the women.

“The comfort women issue has become a global issue, not a bilateral one,” the spokesman quoted Chung as saying.

“We will be able to gather support from the internatio­nal community.”— AFP

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