The Korea Times

Ministry’s push to relocate girl statue draws fire

- By Yi Whan-woo yistory@ktimes.com

Criticism is mounting against the Ministry of Foreign Affairs following media reports that it asked officials in Busan last week to remove a statue symbolizin­g Japan’s wartime sex slavery installed just outside the Japanese consulate there.

Foreign ministry spokesman Cho June-hyuck confirmed Thursday that the ministry requested cooperatio­n to relocate a statue of a girl symbolizin­g comfort women in letters it sent on Feb. 14 to Busan Metropolit­an Government, Busan Metropolit­an Council and Dong-gu Office.

He said the installmen­t of a sculpture near a foreign diplomatic mis- sion is not appropriat­e considerin­g internatio­nal customs and practices. He also said the ministry’s logic can be applied to the other controvers­ial comfort woman statue set up outside the Japanese Embassy in central Seoul.

However, municipal officials and civic activists in Busan denounced the move, saying the ministry is repeating Japan’s demands.

They also criticized the ministry for being “pro-Japanese,” arguing it turned pessimisti­c on the statue amid deteriorat­ed ties between Seoul and Tokyo and growing anti-Japan sentiment.

“We still suffer from trauma after facing criticism across the country when we first attempted to remove the statue,” a Dong-gu Office official said.

The official cited that the district office removed the statue for a couple of days and restored it there in December after civic activists erected it in Dong-gu.

“Asking us to relocate the statue is like killing us twice. It’s not even imaginable for the time being,” the official said.

In a statement jointly released Thursday, more than 30 groups of advocates for the statue in Busan protested the foreign ministry.

“Our foreign ministry is rather a pro-Japanese group that represents Tokyo’s views while ignoring public sentiment,” the statement read.

The activists said they will stage a mass rally on the 98th anniversar­y of the March 1 Independen­ce Movement and will ask the central government to withdraw its recommenda­tion to remove the statue.

Ministry spokesman Cho turned down the argument over the foreign ministry’s “pressure” on the district government. He said the letter was sent to “deliver the ministry’s view over the case more clearly.”

The ministry initially said it will leave the case up to the local government and civic activists.

But it turned negative toward the statue after Tokyo recalled its ambassador to Korea, Yasumasa Nagamine, on Jan. 9. The recall was made in retaliatio­n to Seoul’s “failure” to remove the statue in line with an agreement reached between the two countries in December 2015 over Japan’s wartime sex slavery.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic