New Straits Times

Japan rejects S. Korea deal over wartime forced labour

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TOKYO: Japan yesterday flatly rejected as “unacceptab­le” a South Korean proposal to set up a joint fund to compensate wartime forced labourers, a bitter dispute that has bogged down bilateral ties.

The proposed fund would not solve the issue, the top government spokesman said here.

“The South Korean proposal is utterly unacceptab­le,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said.

“We will continue to urge South Korea to agree to arbitratio­n.”

Relations between the two United States allies have been increasing­ly strained by a series of rulings from South Korean courts ordering Japanese firms that used wartime forced labour to compensate victims.

Japan’s government and the firms involved have rejected the rulings, with Tokyo saying the issue was settled when the two countries normalised relations.

Last month, Tokyo proposed the issue be put to arbitratio­n under the terms of an agreement signed by the two countries in 1965, when ties were normalised.

The agreement calls for the two countries to set up an arbitratio­n panel if they cannot resolve a dispute through diplomatic negotiatio­ns.

South Korea on Wednesday offered a counterpro­posal that would see South Korean and Japanese firms, including those involved in the court cases, set up a voluntary fund to compensate the victims.

“If Tokyo accepts our offer, our government is willing to review the Japanese government’s request (to discuss the issue),” Seoul said in a statement.

Japan and South Korea are both democracie­s, market economies and US allies, but their relationsh­ip has been strained for decades as a result of Tokyo’s brutal 1910-45 colonial rule over the Korean peninsula.

When relations were normalised, Tokyo agreed a reparation­s package that included grants and cheap loans intended to cover victims of various wartime policies.

Japan argues that package should have permanentl­y resolved the issue.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Kim Seong-ju, a victim of wartime forced labour during the Japanese colonial period, arriving with relatives of other victims in front of the Supreme Court in Seoul last year.
REUTERS PIC Kim Seong-ju, a victim of wartime forced labour during the Japanese colonial period, arriving with relatives of other victims in front of the Supreme Court in Seoul last year.

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