Gulf Today

Japan urged to do more for WWII ‘comfort women’

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GENEVA: Japan should do more for victims of wartime sexual slavery, UN rights experts said at a hearing on Friday, insisting Tokyo had yet to provide full redress and reparation­s.

Mainstream historians say up to 200,000 women, mostly from Korea but also other parts of Asia including China and the Philippine­s, were forced to work in Japanese military brothels during World War II.

During a two-day review of Japan’s record before the UN Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion, which ended on Friday, committee members criticised the nation for not focusing enough on the victims.

“I think it is a wound that has been festering for far too long,” Gay Mcdougall, one of 18 committee members, told the assembly.

The head of the Japanese delegation meanwhile insisted his country had atoned enough, after offering numerous apologies and compensati­on.

“The government of Japan recognises that the comfort women issue was an afront to the honour and dignity of a large number of women,” Ambassador Masato Otaka told the committee.

While strongly disputing the use of the term “sex slaves”, he stressed that Tokyo had issued “its most serious apologies and remorse” to the women, including through “letters from successive prime ministers”.

He also said Tokyo had “extended its maximum assistance” to a fund set up to offer medical and other support as well as “atonement money” to the former comfort women “to offer (them) realistic relief.” And he pointed to an agreement reached between Japan and South Korea in December 2015, stress- ing that “both countries conirmed that the comfort women issue was resolved, inally and irreversib­ly.” Under that accord, Japan offered an apology and a one-billion yen ($8.6 million) payment to surviving Korean comfort women.

But critics have said the deal did not go far enough in holding Japan responsibl­e for wartime abuses.

“I don’t think that agreements between government­s... are able or adequate to extinguish the claims of individual­s with regards to human rights abuses,” Mcdougall said.

She urged Japan not to “debate the facts” of what happened, and decried a “sort of blockage... in doing what I think is probably very simple, which is offering apology and reparation­s that the victims feel is adequate and that meets their needs of dignity.”

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