The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘No Japan’ banners scrapped in Seoul after outcry

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A Seoul district was forced to backtrack within hours of starting to put up more than 1,000 anti-Japan banners in the centre of the South Korean capital yesterday as a trade dispute rages between the neighbours.

Local authority workers began hanging the banners from lampposts in Jung-gu, which includes the popular Myeongdong shopping district and tourist destinatio­ns such as the Deoksugung Palace and the Namdaemun Market.

They featured the word ‘NO’, with the red disc of the Japanese flag as the ‘O’, and read: “I won’t go (to Japan), I will not buy (Japanese products).”

Tokyo and Seoul on Friday removed each other from their “white lists” of trusted trading partners, following a series of South Korean court rulings ordering Japanese firms to pay for forced labour during World War II.

Last month, Tokyo had also unveiled tough restrictio­ns on exports crucial to tech titans such as Samsung.

That sparked fury in the South, where almost seven in 10 people still report negative feelings towards Korea’s former colonial ruler, and led to public boycotts of Japanese goods including cars, beer, clothing and pens.

Analysts say politician­s on both sides exploit the issues for domestic purposes, and some Seoul residents reacted angrily to the banners, saying they amounted to official peer pressure.

By yesterday afternoon around 20,000 South Koreans had signed an online petition against them.

“This boycott should be done on an individual basis, not a government-orchestrat­ed display of anti-Japan sentiment,” wrote one petitioner.

Another added: “Japanese tourists are not our enemies.”

The Jung-gu authoritie­s announced the banners would be taken down and district head Seo Yang-ho apologised in a Facebook post, saying he “humbly accepted criticism that any boycott should remain on citizens’ voluntary basis”. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A police officer walks past a makeshift memorial outside Walmart, near the scene of a mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.
— AFP photo A police officer walks past a makeshift memorial outside Walmart, near the scene of a mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.

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