Abe seeks resolution to ‘comfort women’ issue

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Abe seeks resolution to ‘comfort women’ issue

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Japanese Ambassador to South Korea Yasumasa Nagamine speaks to reporters in Tokyo after meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday. [YONHAP]

TOKYO - Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday instructed its ambassador to Korea to request that Seoul implement a landmark 2015 deal to resolve the long-running rift over Japan’s wartime sexual enslavement of Korean women, a Japanese broadcaster reported.

Abe met with Ambassador Yasumasa Nagamine, who will return to Seoul later in the day after being recalled nearly three months ago in response to Korean civic groups erecting a statue of a girl symbolizing the sexual slavery victims in front of its consulate in the southern Korean port city of Busan.

Nagamine was quoted by NHK as saying during the meeting in Abe’s office, “I will make utmost efforts to fulfill the present task,” indicating he will try to ensure the current and next Korean governments carry out the obligations under the deal struck on Dec. 28, 2015, and get the statue removed.

Under the deal, Tokyo apologized and agreed to provide 1 billion yen ($8.9 million) for the creation of a foundation aimed at helping the victims, euphemistically called “comfort women.” They also agreed to resolve the rift over the wartime atrocity “once and for all.”

Nagamine is expected to come back to Seoul, along with the Japanese Consul General in Busan Yasuhiro Morimoto, who was also recalled over the statue dispute.

Tokyo claimed that the statue built before its consulate, along with another one standing in front of its embassy in Seoul, runs counter to the Seoul-Tokyo deal, while Seoul has called for an appropriate solution to the dispute over the statue but veered off from making a promise to get it removed or moved to another place, saying that it is not in its purview to do so since the statue was built by civic groups.

Asked about how he will demand Seoul implement the deal, Nagamine said he is arranging a meeting to hold talks with Korean Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, who is also acting president, about the issue.

Nagamine said prior to his meeting with Abe he paid a courtesy call on Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, who instructed him to make every effort to demand the next Korean government inherit the 2015 deal.

The next Korea government that is set to be launched next month should observe the deal, Suga told a press conference earlier in the day.

Korea is set to hold a presidential election on May 9 following the impeachment of former President Park Geun-hye. Some major presidential candidates have hinted at renegotiating the deal.

Critics in Seoul demand the cancellation of the accord, saying that the Japanese government still refuses to recognize its legal responsibility and denied the women were forcefully recruited to front-line military brothels. The deal was reached also without consultation with the victims, they said.

Historians estimate that up to 200,000 women, mostly from Korea, were forced to work in front-line brothels for Japanese troops during World War II. Around 40 surviving Korean victims are mostly in their late 80s.

Yonhap
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