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Review Confirms Basis of Japan's Sex Slave Apology

Aepsilons

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I just read this and thought it actually quite pertinent.



By MARI YAMAGUCHI Associated Press

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The study that led Japan to apologize in 1993 for forcing Asian women into wartime prostitution was confirmed as valid by a parliament-appointed panel Friday after South Korea and China slammed the review as an attempt to discredit historical evidence of such abuses.

Officials said Japan stood by its earlier pledge not to change the landmark apology.

"We concluded that the content of the study was valid," said lawyer Keiichi Tadaki, who headed the five-member panel that reviewed about 250 sets of documents used for the government study that was the basis of the 1993 apology.

The new investigation focused on how the study, which included interviews with 16 former Korean victims, was conducted, not evaluation of its historical findings. But any discussion of bitter World War II history is sensitive, especially when Japan's relations with its two closest neighbors are soured by territorial disputes.

The panel started its study in April after Nobuo Ishihara, a top bureaucrat who helped in the 1993 study questioned the authenticity of the interviews, while suggesting Seoul possibly pressured Tokyo into acknowledging the women were coerced. Ishihara spoke at parliament as a witness for a nationalist lawmaker who demanded the review.

Tadaki, who briefed the contents of the report, said Japan had enough evidence from other documents to produce the apology and that the hearings of the women were supplementary and intended to show Japan's compassion rather than to verify historical evidence. His team's report acknowledged Tokyo and Seoul negotiated at length over the wording but that did not distort historical facts mentioned in the apology, he said.

Historians say 20,000 to 200,000 women from across Asia, many of them Koreans, were forced to provide sex to Japan's front-line soldiers. Japanese nationalists contend that women in wartime brothels were voluntary prostitutes, not sex slaves, and that Japan has been unfairly criticized for a practice they say is common in any country at war.

Abe himself has been criticized by South Korea and China for backpedaling from past Japanese apologies and acknowledgements of wartime atrocities.

Japanese officials interviewed 16 of such women in 1993 at South Korea's request as part of an investigation that led to the apology by then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono, and known as "the Kono statement," which acknowledged many women were forced into prostitution for Japan's wartime military.

The report said Seoul urged Tokyo to show sincerity and acknowledge coercion to make an apology acceptable to the South Koreans. The two countries agreed to keep secret their negotiations over the apology statement.

The report noted Ishihara had insisted Japan should never acknowledge all comfort women were forced. It said Japan was initially reluctant to meet the women due to fear it would create an uncontrollable and endless situation.

In 1995, Japan provided through a private fund 2 million yen ($20,000) each to about 280 women in the Philippines, Taiwan and South Korea, and funded nursing homes and medical assistance for Indonesian and former Dutch sex slaves. In South Korea, seven women accepted the money out of more than 200 eligible recipients, following criticism of the private fund instead of official compensation.

Seoul has criticized Japan's verification as a contradictory action, meaningless and unnecessary.

"The Japanese government should clearly know that action that again picks on the painful wound of the victims will never be forgiven by the international society," South Korea's Foreign Ministry spokesman Noh Kwang-il told reporters. He urged Japan to admit its responsibility and immediately propose a solution that the elderly victims can accept.

Government spokesman Yoshihide Suga reiterated Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's pledge not to revise the 1993 apology, saying that evaluation of the historical evidence should be left up to historians and scholars.

"Japan's relations with South Korea are extremely important and we will try to explain this issue to gain understanding," Suga said.

The United States counts both Japan and South Korea as key allies. The State Department said it took note of Suga's statement and the Abe government's position to uphold the apology.

"Because South Korea and Japan have so many common interests, it's important they find a way to resolve the past in the most productive manner and look to the future on how they can work together on issues they share," spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters in Washington.

Relations are already strained in the region, and adding to the ire, the South Korean navy on Friday conducted live-fire exercises in seas near islands that are claimed by both countries. Top Japanese officials protested the drills, but South Korean officials said the exercises were routine and rejected Tokyo's demands to cancel them.

———

Associated Press writers Jung-yoon Choi in Seoul, Elaine Kurtenbach in Tokyo and Matthew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.
 
I can tell that the US is pressuring their puppet Japan from behind. One thing the US will never understand is that the Korean are very prideful people by nature. They can see this as a fake cover for Japan re-militarization process in which they want no part of it because it will put South Korea back in the burner and possibly in direct confrontation with the country that offers them the most benefit, the red dragon! LOL
 
Korea still incensed about "watered down apology":

Tokyo's trickery cannot deceive international community

For the past several months, the Japanese government has racked its brain how to dilute, if not revoke, Tokyo's 1993 apology for the wartime sex slavery of foreign women. Friday's announcement was its result.

As expected, Tokyo stopped short of denting the essence of the "Kono statement," called after the then Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono, in which Japan offered its first full apology for the imperial army's coercing and coaxing hundreds of thousands of mostly Asian women to serve as prostitutes in military brothels during World War II.

But the Japanese government certainly did its best to make the apology appear less based on historical facts than on "diplomatic compromise" with Seoul, by stressing that the statement came after bilateral negotiations 21 years ago.

But will these attempts by the Japanese Cabinet under right-wing nationalist Prime Minister Shinzo Abe be successful?

We doubt it.

Their recent efforts have shown only that Japan's political leaders are incurable historical retrogrades who can never face up to their country's wartime misconduct, trying to justify and even glorify it. By denying historical facts supported by hard evidence, the incumbent leaders are not just revealing their glaring brazenness but sullying their more conscientious predecessors.

The Kono statement and a broader "Murayama statement," which came two years later to offer Japan's self-reflection and apology for its overall historical wrongdoing in Asia, are the two pillars bolstering the bilateral relationship. It is more than regrettable in this regard that Abe has shown his eagerness to revise the two apologies since he was re-elected prime minister two years ago. Moreover, all that keeps Abe from putting his ideas into action are his concerns about Tokyo's relationship with Washington, not Seoul.

Abe's historical revisionism is all the more worrisome, as it combines with his foremost objective to make Japan a "normal" country ― one that can conduct war ― reviving Japan as a global military power. Already, Abe is taking steps to exercise Japan's right to collective self-defense, with Japan developing state-of-the-art weaponry along with foreign partners. All this explains why Koreans feel it doubly repugnant that Tokyo made an unjustifiable protest against the Korean Navy's firing drill around the Dokdo islets earlier in the day.

Yet Abe and his Cabinet must know the so-called comfort women issue is not just a source of diplomatic friction with Korea, but concerns a more universal issue of human rights and women's rights in particular. The harder Tokyo tries to justify its egregious abuses of foreign women's rights about seven decades ago, the more isolated today's Japan will become in the international community. Japan's leaders need look no further than the growing number of U.S. localities planning to erect statues of a Korean girl in the 1940s as the epitome of victimization by Japanese imperialists.

What they should also know is Tokyo's future behavior will determine Seoul's stance toward Japan's rivalry with a resurgent China in Asia. Worse yet, how and what Japan does will also decide the future of the trilateral relationship, inclusive of the U.S., in this part of the world.

Abe must stop his "verification" of previous apologies, once and for all.

Watered down apology
 
Although in WWII, many Korean joint Japan Imperial Army and assisted Japanese invaders in China battlefield. But China didn't forget Ahn Joong-keun and built a museum in Harbin city for a Korean Hero.
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They ?! still waiting for justice.
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