Orlando Sentinel

Documents show Japan’s role involving WWII sex slaves

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TOKYO — Japan’s army during World War II asked the government to provide one sex slave for every 70 soldiers, according to historical documents reviewed by Kyodo News service that highlight the state role in the so-called “comfort women” system.

The 23 documents were gathered by Japan’s Cabinet Secretaria­t between April 2017 and March 2019, including 13 classified dispatches from Japanese consulates in China to the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo dating back to 1938, according to Kyodo.

The sex slaves issue has been a source of a painful dispute between South Korea and Japan. The women were from Korea, Taiwan and Australia, the Philippine­s as well as Japan.

In 1993, then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono, the government spokesman, apologized for the “comfort women” system and acknowledg­ed the Japanese military’s involvemen­t in taking women against their will.

The Kyodo reports show one dispatch from the consul general of Jinan to the foreign minister that said the Japanese invasion had caused a surge in prostituti­on in the area, with 101 geisha from Japan, 110 comfort women from Japan and 228 comfort women from Korea.

It says “at least 500 comfort women must be concentrat­ed here by the end of April” for Japanese soldiers.

Presumably, the records imply that the women referred to as “geisha” might have come on their own, as opposed to sex slaves, who were coerced.

Another dispatch from the consul general of Qingdao in Shandong province in China says the Imperial Army asked for one woman to accommodat­e every 70 soldiers, while the navy had requested 150 more comfort women and geisha, Kyodo said.

The number of sex slaves is not certain, but historians say they numbered in the tens of thousands or more, and their purpose was to prevent the spread of disease and curtail rapes among soldiers.

Japan’s colonizati­on and wartime record continue to strain relations with Asian neighbors. The Japanese government says reparation­s are settled but it has set up funds to support the victims. That has had mixed results with continued demands for a more thorough apology. Lawsuits are ongoing in South Korea.

Some have denied official Japanese involvemen­t, and think the women were prostitute­s who came of their own accord.

More recently, the sour relations between Japan and South Korea have affected trade and tourism and set off other controvers­ies, including one earlier this year over the display of a statue depicting a young “comfort woman.”

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/AP 2017 ?? A statue representi­ng sex slaves is seen near the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea.
LEE JIN-MAN/AP 2017 A statue representi­ng sex slaves is seen near the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea.

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