Albuquerque Journal

Apology for sex slavery mollifies S. Korea

Japan’s use of “comfort women” in WWII fueled acrimony for decades

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SEOUL, South Korea — An apology from Japan’s prime minister and a pledge of more than $8 million sealed a breakthrou­gh deal Monday in a decades-long impasse with South Korea over Korean women forced into Japanese military-run brothels during World War II.

The accord, which aims to resolve the emotional core of South Korea’s grievances with its former colonial overlord, could begin to reverse decades of animosity and mistrust between the two thriving democracie­s, trade partners and staunch U.S. allies. It represents a shift for Tokyo’s conservati­ve government and a new willingnes­s to compromise by previously wary Seoul.

A statement by both countries’ foreign ministers said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe “expresses anew his most sincere apologies and remorse to all the women who underwent immeasurab­le and painful experience­s and suffered incurable physical and psychologi­cal wounds as comfort women,” the euphemisti­c name given the women.

Historians say tens of thousands of women from around Asia, many of them Korean, were sent to front-line military brothels to provide sex to Japanese soldiers.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if Abe would be issuing a separate written statement or if it would be directly delivered to the 46 surviving former Korean sex slaves, now in their 80s and 90s.

The language mirrored past expression­s of remorse by other prime ministers, although it was seen by some in Seoul as an improvemen­t on previous comments by Abe’s hawkish government.

Another deciding factor was that the $8.3 million — to create a foundation to help provide support for the victims — came from the government, not private sources.

South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se said Seoul considers the agreement “final and irreversib­le,” as long as Japan follows through with its promises.

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