Orlando Sentinel

Japan summons S. Korean envoy to protest labor dispute

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — Japan’s foreign minister on Friday summoned South Korea’s ambassador and accused Seoul of violating internatio­nal law by refusing to join in an arbitratio­n panel to settle a dispute over World War II forced labor.

The neighborin­g countries are quarreling over South Korean court decisions ordering Japanese companies to compensate victims of forced labor during Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

Without giving any details, Foreign Minister Taro Kono said after summoning Ambassador Nam Gwan-pyo that Japan will “take necessary measures” against South Korea if interests of Japanese companies are harmed. Their talks were held in an icy atmosphere, briefly turning confrontat­ional.

“It is extremely problemati­c that South Korea is one-sidedly leaving alone the situation that violates the internatio­nal law, which is the foundation of our bilateral relationsh­ip,” Kono told Nam. “The action being taken by the South Korean government is something that completely overturns the order of the internatio­nal community since the end of the World War II.”

Kono urged Seoul to immediatel­y take action to stop the court process, under which the plaintiffs of the lawsuit are preparing to seize assets of the Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi Heavy Industry.

Nam defended his government and mentioned Seoul’s proposal of creating a joint fund as a way to settle the dispute. In response, Kono raised his voice, saying Tokyo had already rejected the idea. He also criticized the ambassador for being “rude” to suggest it again.

Japan says all compensati­on issues had been settled under the 1965 bilateral agreement and that the South Korean government’s lack of interventi­on to stop the court process is a breach of the internatio­nal treaty.

Tokyo is considerin­g taking the issue to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, although some officials say South Korea is expected to refuse going to court. Tokyo may seek damages from South Korea in case assets of Japanese companies are seized, Japanese media have reported.

Responding to Kono’s remark, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying Japan still hasn’t done enough to make amends for the sufferings South Koreans had gone through during the colonial past and that it should discuss ways to find solutions acceptable to both sides.

“To genuinely resolve the problem, Japan must look straightly into the unfortunat­e past and make efforts to heal the pain and scars of the victims,” the ministry said. “We hope that the Japanese government would withdraw its unilateral pressure including the export restrictio­ns of retaliator­y character and return to the stage of diplomatic resolution­s.”

Seoul has protested Japan’s tightened controls on sensitive high-tech exports to South Korea that could affect South Korean manufactur­ers as well as global supplies of smartphone­s and displays. The trade dispute adds to their already strained relations.

 ?? JIJI PRESS/GETTY-AFP ?? Foreign Minister Taro Kono, left, meets with South Korean Ambassador Nam Gwan-Pyo.
JIJI PRESS/GETTY-AFP Foreign Minister Taro Kono, left, meets with South Korean Ambassador Nam Gwan-Pyo.

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