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'Comfort women': Japan and South Korea hail agreement

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Lalit

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Long awaited solace to the "comfort women" at last!


[h=1]'Comfort women': Japan and South Korea hail agreement[/h]
  • 28 December 2015
  • From the section Asia
The leaders of Japan and South Korea have welcomed the agreement between their two countries to settle the issue of "comfort women" forced to work in Japanese brothels during World War Two.
Japan has apologised and will pay 1bn yen ($8.3m; £5.6m) - the amount South Korea asked for - to fund victims.
Estimates suggest up to 200,000 women were sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during WW2, many of them Korean.
Other women came from China, the Philippines, Indonesia and Taiwan.
The issue has been the key cause of strained relations between Japan and South Korea.
Only 46 former "comfort women" are still alive in South Korea.
The agreement came after Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida met his counterpart Yun Byung-se in Seoul, following moves to speed up talks.
Later Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe phoned South Korean President Park Geun-hye to repeat an apology already offered by Mr Kishida.
"Japan and South Korea are now entering a new era," Mr Abe told reporters afterwards. "We should not drag this problem into the next generation."
Ms Park issued a separate statement, saying a deal had been urgently needed - given the advanced age of most of the victims.
"Nine died this year alone," she said. "I hope the mental pains of the elderly comfort women will be eased."

  • Japan will give 1bn yen to a fund for the elderly comfort women, which the South Korean government will administer
  • The money also comes with an apology by Japan's prime minister and the acceptance of "deep responsibility" for the issue
  • South Korea says it will consider the matter resolved "finally and irreversibly" if Japan fulfils its promises
  • South Korea will also look into removing a statue symbolising comfort women, which activists erected outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul in 2011
  • Both sides have agreed to refrain from criticising each other on this issue in the international community

After the meeting in Seoul, Mr Kishida called the agreement "epoch-making".
"Prime Minister Abe expresses anew his most sincere apologies and remorse to all the women who underwent immeasurable and painful experiences and suffered incurable physical and psychological wounds as comfort women," Mr Kishida told reporters.
The wording of the deal does not explicitly state that the "comfort women" will receive direct compensation, but states that the fund will provide "support" and bankroll "projects for recovering the honour and dignity and healing the psychological wounds".
Some former "comfort women", such as Lee Yong-soo, have taken issue with this.
The 88-year-old told the BBC: "I wonder whether the talks took place with the victims really in mind. We're not after the money. If the Japanese committed their sins, they should offer direct official government compensation."
Another former "comfort woman", 88-year-old Yoo Hee-nam, said: "If I look back, we've lived a life deprived of our basic rights as human beings. So I can't be fully satisfied.
"But we've been waiting all this time for the South Korean government to resolve the issue legally. As the government worked hard to settle deal before the turn of the year, I'd like to follow the government's lead."
In Japan journalist Nobuo Ikeda reflected the view of many on Twitter that the country had lost out, although others thought the deal could have been worse for Mr Abe.
"Japan pays 1bn yen and our PM apologises but South Korea will 'consult about the girl's statue' - that's not a diplomatic negotiation," Mr Ikeda tweeted.
With only days left until the end of the year, the timing of the talks was highly symbolic and the expectations for results were high.
Earlier in the year, the South Korean president called for a resolution to the "comfort women" dispute by the year's end, marking the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations.
However, few believed that a quick breakthrough could be reached on a thorny issue that has strained the region for decades and some critics say the talks have been rushed to preserve the symbolism.
It's unclear if Japan's admission of responsibility was legal or just humanitarian, and Tokyo's offer of 1bn yen has been described as a measure to help the women, not as direct government compensation.
The dozens of surviving women have asked for a formal apology specifically addressed to themselves, and direct compensation. They say past expressions of regret have been only halfway and insincere.
Negotiators appear to have overcome several obstacles including disagreements over the wording of the agreement and the amount of compensation. Tokyo was reportedly initially considering paying only about 100m yen.
The United States congratulated the governments of Japan and South Korea on reaching the agreement.
"We believe this comprehensive resolution is an important gesture of healing and reconciliation," a White House statement said.
"The United States applauds... two of our most important allies for having the courage and vision to forge a lasting settlement to this difficult issue."
Japan has repeatedly apologised or acknowledged its responsibility for wartime sex slaves, most notably in a 1993 statement by the then-chief cabinet secretary Yohei Kono.
It had also resisted giving greater compensation, arguing that the dispute was settled in 1965 when diplomatic ties were normalised between the two countries and more than $800m in economic aid and loans was given to South Korea.
A private fund was also set up in 1995 for the victims and lasted for a decade, but money came from donations and not from the Japanese government.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35190464
 
Terrible to read; mutilating the body and mind at the prime age, made to suffer mental agony altogether for decades and providing the solace of money after crossing 80s & 90s...........................what a world !
 
Truly, these "comfort women" hardly had a life of comfortable living with dignity!
Now, adding insult to injury comes the latest shocking update!

[h=1]‘Comfort women’ funds won’t be paid until sex slave statue outside Japanese Embassy removed: source[/h]KYODO




The money Japan promised in the “comfort women” agreement Monday won’t be paid unless the symbolic comfort women statue in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul is removed, a Japanese government source said, casting a shadow over the historic deal.
The text agreed by Seoul and Tokyo does not make removal a precondition for provision of funds.
The condition was set by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the source said Wednesday, amid looming domestic opposition to the use of public funds to help the ianfu (comfort women) while the statue remains.
Ianfu is Japan’s euphemism for the girls and women who were rounded up to provide sex for Imperial Japanese soldiers before and during World War II. Many of the victims were from the Korean Peninsula, which was under Japanese colonial rule from 1910 to 1945.
It will be a “litmus test” to gauge how serious the South Korean government is about resolving the matter, the government source said.
The individual said the agreement, a gesture of commitment by the Abe administration, is a bid to push Seoul to settle the issue once and for all.
The source noted that even though Tokyo believed the matter of the comfort women was resolved in a 1965 deal, it has helped the victims via the Asian Women’s Fund, and in 2001 Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi sent letters of apology to them.
The source said Abe believed the South Korean government had been “moving the goal posts” every time the nation underwent a change in leadership. If this occurred again, Tokyo was worried about a significant backlash from the Japanese public.
The source said the South Korean government recognized that Japan’s disbursement of the money, which Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said will total ¥1 billion, is contingent upon the statue’s removal.
South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se told a group of South Korean reporters Wednesday that Seoul will urge Tokyo to refrain from behavior “that could cause misunderstanding,” an apparent reference to reports that Japan intended to link the money to the fate of the statue.
The statue’s removal was not mentioned as a condition for the financial aid when Kishida and Yun jointly announced the deal in Seoul on Monday. South Korea said of the statue in the announcement that it “will strive to solve this issue in an appropriate manner.”
The statue of a girl symbolizing the issue was erected in 2011 by the Korean Council for Women Drafted for Sexual Slavery by Japan, a civic group that supports survivors of the wartime ordeal, on a sidewalk near the embassy.
The group has refused calls to remove the statue and said at Wednesday’s weekly protest rally that it will try to get more of them built inside and outside South Korea.
Abe’s Facebook page has been flooded with protest messages from those dissatisfied with the bilateral agreement. Some branded it “a diplomatic defeat” and others threatened not to support his Cabinet.

source : http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...ve-statue-by-japanese-embassy-removed-source/





 
Comfort woman bronze statue in Seoul

Comfort-Women-statue.jpg
 
More from the Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ns-embassy-in-south-korea-could-be-a-problem/

[h=1]The statue of a wartime sex slave outside Japan’s embassy in South Korea could be a problem[/h]








On Monday, Japan and South Korea reached an important agreement in a decades-old dispute over wartime sex slaves. Under the deal, Japan would pay $8.3 million into a South Korean fund to support the 46 surviving South Korean “comfort women” — a euphemism for women coerced by the Japanese Imperial Army to work as sex slaves during World War II.
This agreement is a surprising but positive development in relations between Japan and South Korea, two major U.S. allies whose shared history has been deeply troubled. In a sign of how seriously both sides are taking this moment, Tokyo and Seoul have said that the new deal had “finally and irreversibly” resolved the dispute over wartime sex slaves.
Hkg10240819.jpg
A man on Tuesday wraps a muffler around the leg of a statue in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul symbolizing a wartime sex slave. (Jung Yeon-je/AFP via Getty Images)

05082805.jpg
Protesters gather near the statue on Tuesday. (Jeon Heon-kyun/EPA)

However, one very visceral reminder of the terrible history sits in the middle of Seoul, outside the Japanese Embassy. A life-size bronze statue of a barefoot girl, symbolizing a "comfort woman," was erected in December 2011 to honor the 1,000th weekly Wednesday demonstration outside the embassy by survivors and their supporters.
The empty chair next to the statue is said to symbolize the survivors who have passed away while waiting for a full apology from Japan. (Japan officially apologized for its colonial-era use of sex slaves in 1993, though many critics said this was not enough.)
Japanese authorities have long asked that the statue be moved, saying that it contravenes the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, which calls for host countries to protect diplomatic missions.
However, South Korean authorities have defended the statue and its placement.
“The victims are over 80 years old and passing away, and the government is not in a position to tell them to remove the statue,” Cho Byung-jae, a spokesman for South Korea’s Foreign Ministry, told the New York Timeswhen the statue was unveiled. “Rather than insisting on the removal of the statue, the Japanese government should seriously ask itself why these victims have held their weekly rallies for 20 years, never missing a week, and whether it really cannot find a way to restore the honor these woman so earnestly want.”
Since that monument was unveiled, more have followed it — including one in Virginia's Fairfax County. The statue and others like it have helped spur new attempts to force another apology from Japan to South Korea's wartime sex slaves.
With the new agreement between Japan and South Korea, the future of the statue in Seoul is unclear. The Chosun Ilbo, a Seoul-based newspaper, writes that a clause in the statement signed by the two parties on Monday suggests that it could be removed.
According to Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has insisted that the statue be removed. But South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se is reported to have told journalists that the issue would be resolved "by negotiating with relevant civic groups."
Some of these civic groups are incensed by the ambiguity about the statue's future. "It is a public property and a historic symbol representing the peaceful spirit of the Wednesday Demonstrations, which has been continued by the survivors and the citizens for over a thousand Wednesdays," the Korean Council for the Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery by Japan said in a statement. "The Korean government cannot mention anything about the removal or moving of the Monument."
Although Japan may not immediately push for the removal of the statue, its eventual fate will be important in a country where many feel they have apologized enough for past crimes.
"It is not something that friendly nations normally do," an unnamed former Japanese diplomat told the news agency Reuters.
 
Terrible to read; mutilating the body and mind at the prime age, made to suffer mental agony altogether for decades and providing the solace of money after crossing 80s & 90s...........................what a world !

Thank you sir for your sympathetic response. This issue has been agitating the human rights activists, feminists and all righteous persons for decades and this post is only an humble attempt to highlight the human tragedy caused by WW II!
 
Te precondition of Japan that Comfort women’ funds won’t be paid until sex slave statue outside Japanese Embassy at SEOUL is removed.............shows how much Japanese people are ashamed of by the acts of their fathers and grand fathers.
The statue is a symbol of shame.

What is done can never be undone by payment of money.

 
Inspite of all the abuses of world war 2,south korean men and women flock to japan to undertake all menial work.

korean folks themselves have forgotten the war and its sex slaves and have moved on. only politicians squabble for their

own reasons.

It is like brindavan widows.

most pity their plight.

most do not do anything about it.

many of them are from bengal and are from higher castes.
 
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