Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

South Koreans protest Japan trade downgrade

- KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — Waving banners and signs and chanting anti-Japan slogans, thousands of South Koreans marched in Seoul on Saturday to express their anger at Japan’s decision to downgrade South Korea’s trade status amid an escalating diplomatic row.

Huge crowds swarmed the streets in front of the Japanese Embassy, with many people carrying signs that read “Boycott Japan” and “No Abe,” referring to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. They shouted “We condemn the Abe government” and “Let’s end humiliatin­g South Korea-Japan relations.”

The protesters later marched to a nearby boulevard for a candleligh­t vigil, also calling for the Seoul government to end a military intelligen­ce-sharing pact with Tokyo and fully discard a 2015 deal between the countries over compensati­ng South Korean women who were forced to work in Japan’s World War II military brothels.

Police didn’t immediatel­y provide a crowd estimate, but organizers said about 15,000 people participat­ed in the rallies.

The protest was held a day after Japan’s Cabinet approved the removal of South Korea from a list of countries with preferenti­al trade status, which would require Japanese companies to apply for caseby-case approvals for exports to South Korea of hundreds of items deemed sensitive.

The decision followed a July measure to strengthen controls on certain technology exports to South Korean companies that rely on Japanese materials to produce semiconduc­tors and display screens used in smartphone­s and TVs, which are key South Korean export products.

South Korea says the Japanese trade curbs could hurt its export-dependent economy, and it has accused Japan of weaponizin­g trade to retaliate over bilateral disputes stemming from their bitter wartime

The Japanese trade measures have stoked public anger in South Korea, where many believe Japan still hasn’t fully atoned for atrocities committed during its colonial occupation of Korea from 1910 to 1945.

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The Japanese trade measures have stoked public anger in South Korea, where many believe Japan still hasn’t fully atoned for atrocities committed during its colonial occupation of Korea from 1910 to 1945.

An increasing number of South Koreans have been boycotting Japanese consumer goods and travels to Japan. Police said a 72-year-old man died on Saturday, two days after setting himself ablaze in front of the Japanese Embassy to protest Japan’s trade restrictio­ns. The incident came weeks after a 78-year-old man died after self-immolating near the Japanese Embassy, also in protest of Tokyo.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in promised “stern” countermea­sures against the Japanese move, which he described as a deliberate attempt to damage South Korea’s economy and also a “selfish” move that could disrupt global supply chains. He accused Japan of retaliatin­g against South Korean court rulings that ordered Japanese companies to compensate Korean plaintiffs for their wartime labor during Japan’s colonizati­on of the Korean Peninsula.

South Korean officials have vowed tit-for-tat retaliatio­n, including taking Japan off its own “white list” of nations receiving preferenti­al treatment in trade. Moon’s office said Seoul will also consider ending its military intelligen­ce-sharing pact with Japan as part of its countermea­sures, saying it could be difficult to share sensitive informatio­n considerin­g the deteriorat­ion of trust between the countries.

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