The Asian Age

Japan advocate for abductees is dead

He was face of drive to bring back those taken to N. Korea

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Tokyo, June 6: Shigeru Yokota, a Japanese campaigner for the return of his daughter and more than a dozen others who were abducted to North Korea in the 1970s, has died. He was 87. His family said he died of natural causes in a hospital in Kawasaki, near Tokyo before he was able to meet his daughter again.

“My husband and I did our best together, but he passed before seeing Megumi again. Now I’m at a loss,” his wife Sakie, 84, said in a statement. Megumi disappeare­d in 1977 on her way home from her a junior high school in Niigata

on Japan’s northern coast when she was 13. It was the day after she gave her father a comb as a birthday gift, a memento he always carried with him.

A former Central Bank official, Yokota, and his wife kept looking for Megumi and found out 20 years later that she had been abducted to North Korea by its agents. In 1997, Yokota founded a group with other abduction victims’ families and headed it for a decade. The smiling and softspoken Yokota became the face of the campaign that eventually gained government backing.

The Yokotas had travelled around Japan carrying their daughter’s photos. An image of an innocentlo­oking teenager in a school uniform became a rallying cry for their cause. After years of denial, North Korea in 2002 acknowledg­ed abducting 13 Japanese.

Japan maintains that the

North abducted at least 17 people to train agents in Japanese language and culture to spy on rival South Korea. Five of the abductees were allowed to return home for a visit later that year and have since stayed. North Korea says eight others, including Megumi, had died and denies that the other four entered its territory. Their families and the Japanese government disagree.

North Korea sent samples of what it said were Megumi’s ashes but DNA examinatio­n showed they were not hers and were mixed with non-human remains. In 2014, the Yokotas travelled to Mongolia to meet a daughter Megumi gave birth to in North Korea, but Megumi was not there.

Japan and North Korea have no diplomatic ties, and efforts to resolve the abductions have since largely stalled. Many elderly relatives say they’re running out of time to see their loved ones. “I’m filled with regret and sadness that we haven’t been able to bring (Megumi) back,” Japanese PM Shinzo Abe said. He renewed his pledge to bring the abductees home.

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