The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Japan balks at apology over ‘comfort women’

Renewed tension threatens official’s trip to Korea Games.

- Motoko Rich ©2018 The New York Times

TOKYO — On matters of history, Japan and South Korea can never seem to agree to disagree.

Three days after South Korea said it would not roll back a 2015 accord over women forced into sexual slavery for the Japanese military during World War II, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan rejected Friday “additional measures” sought by Seoul.

The issue even threatened to jeopardize his attendance at the Winter Olympics’ opening ceremony next month.

Responding to a call by South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, for a renewed and sincere apology to the so-called comfort women, Abe told reporters, “We can by no means accept South Korea’s unilateral request for additional measures.”

“The Japan-South Korea deal was a promise between countries,” Abe said. “It is an internatio­nal and universal principle to keep it.”

The issue of the sex slaves remains the deepest longstandi­ng wound between the two countries, with critics on each side accusing the other of twisting or whitewashi­ng history. The latest developmen­ts threaten to ignite a fresh diplomatic debate at a time when Japan and South Korea face a continuing nuclear crisis on the Korean Peninsula.

When, in late 2015, the South Korean president, Park Geun-hye, signed the agreement with Abe, the two countries said it was a “final and irreversib­le” settlement of the wartime issue.

The deal included a Japanese government apology and an $8.8 million fund to help provide old-age care for survivors. But the agreement was immediatel­y criticized in South Korea as insufficie­nt; after Park was impeached in 2016 and Moon was elected as her successor, he pledged to review the deal.

A government-appointed panel concluded that South Korea had failed to represent the victims’ demands for Japan to take legal responsibi­lity and offer official reparation­s.

Moon’s government said this week it would not renegotiat­e the deal, but on Tuesday, his foreign minister, Kang Kyung-wha, said the 2015 settlement could not

be regarded as “a genuine resolution.” She added that South Korea would set aside its own $8.8 million fund for the victims, while discussing with Japan what to do with its contributi­on.

The next day, Moon called on Japan to “apologize with wholeheart­ed sincerity to the victims and take this as a lesson so as to avoid the recurrence of such atrocities by making efforts in conjunctio­n with the internatio­nal community.”

Abe told journalist­s the request for an additional apology was “unacceptab­le.”

With the issue flaring a month before the opening ceremony of the Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, on Feb. 9, the Japanese news media reported that Abe might boycott the event.

Abe’s office said he was still deciding whether to go, given that a new session of parliament was set to open on Jan. 22. Abe attended the opening ceremony at the Winter Olympics in 2014 in Sochi, Russia, even though he missed part of a parliament­ary session to do so.

Many commentato­rs in Japan supported Abe’s pushback on South Korea’s demand. Even an editorial in the left-leaning daily Asahi Shimbun, which is often critical of Abe, said Seoul’s latest statement on the 2015 accord “is not consistent with past developmen­ts,” adding that “Japan should consider all positive options for maintainin­g the agreement, without being told by South Korea what to do.”

Several analysts said Japan had repeatedly apologized to the women forced to work in Japanese military brothels, dating to a landmark statement 25 years ago in which Yohei Kono, then the chief

Cabinet secretary, acknowledg­ed that the Japanese military had played some role in forcing Korean women to provide sex to soldiers.

Critics, however, noted that before becoming prime minister for the second time in 2012, Abe publicly questioned whether Japan’s imperial military actually coerced Korean women into sexual slavery.

Asking for a new apology indicates that the South Korean government is tacitly trying to revise the 2015 agreement that was meant to settle the issue, said Yoshiki Mine, a former official with the Japanese Foreign Ministry and now head of the Institute for Peaceful Diplomacy, a research organizati­on. “The Korean position is so contradict­ory and so confusing and problemati­c,” Mine said.

Koichi Nakano, a political scientist at Sophia University in Tokyo, said the 2015 agreement was flawed because it was made between government leaders and did not include the voices of the victims.

“When you are talking about victims of human rights abuses, you can’t come to a resolution without their presence and consent,” he said. “As long as there are people who are not convinced that the apologies are heartfelt or that the compensati­on is adequate, then of course the aggressor would continue to ask for forgivenes­s and atonement.”

In South Korea, Moon’s party, the Democratic Party of Korea, said the 2015 agreement did not go far enough.

“What the victims of wartime sexual slavery want is recognitio­n of legal responsibi­lity,” said Kim Hyon, a spokeswoma­n for the party. in a statement.

 ?? NYT ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in (center) meets with women forced into brothels for Japanese soldiers during WWII. The issue of the sex slaves remains a longstandi­ng wound between the countries, with critics on each side accusing the other of...
NYT South Korean President Moon Jae-in (center) meets with women forced into brothels for Japanese soldiers during WWII. The issue of the sex slaves remains a longstandi­ng wound between the countries, with critics on each side accusing the other of...

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