Gulf News

‘Comfort woman’ statue removed

Manila City Hall says the bronze statue will be returned once drainage work is completed

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Astatue honouring women who were forced to work in Japanese military brothels during the Second World War was quietly removed from a busy seaside promenade in the Philippine capital, angering women’s groups.

Manila City Hall said in a statement that the bronze statue of a blindfolde­d Filipina, unveiled alongside Manila Bay in December, will be returned once drainage work is completed. It gave no time frame for the project, alarming activists who suspect that the Japanese government pressured the Philippine­s to take the monument down.

“What happened is that we knelt down to the Japanese. … That’s why it’s shameful, so shameful,” said Teresita Ang See, co-founding president of a Chinese Filipino group.

Michael Charleston “Xiao” Chua, a professor at the De La Salle University Manila, called on the public to fight to get back the statue as a symbol of national dignity.

The monument was removed Friday night.

Japan’s Minister for Internal Affairs and Communicat­ions Seiko Noda had expressed regret over the constructi­on of the monument in January. According to Kyodo News service quoting the Japanese Embassy in Manila, the Philippine government had notified the embassy of its intention to remove the statue. The emotional issue of “comfort women” has provided a dilemma for the Philippine­s’ relations with Tokyo, a major provider of aid and financing to Manila.

A National Historical Commission marker says the monument memorialis­es Filipinas who suffered abuses during the Japanese occupation of the Philippine­s from 1942 to 1945. It was built with donations from Chinese-Filipino groups and individual­s.

Historians say 20,000 to 200,000 women from across Asia, many of them Koreans, were forced to provide sex to Japan’s front-line soldiers.

 ?? AP ?? The statue of a ‘Comfort Woman’ along a scenic Baywalk in Manila, Philippine­s.
AP The statue of a ‘Comfort Woman’ along a scenic Baywalk in Manila, Philippine­s.

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