Japan's move to list the 23 industrial sites, many of them
coal mines, shipyards and steel mills dating back to 1850, in a
UNESCO program, has stoked anger in South Korea as another
attempt to gloss over Japan's brutal colonial and wartime past.
"Space and time continue. Japan is unable to deny (forced labor)
existed, so it is trying to avoid it," a South Korean foreign
ministry official told a small group of Western media.
"It can possibly turn into another case of historic distortion,"
the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the subject.
Japan's bid, and South Korea's objection, are likely to further
fuel diplomatic tension between the Asian neighbors, centered on
issues stemming from Japan's colonial rule of the Korean
peninsula between 1910 and 1945.
South Korea's ties with Japan have long been marred by what
Seoul sees as Japanese leaders' reluctance to atone for the
country's wartime past, including a full recognition of its role
in forcing Korean women into prostitution at military brothels.
The neighbors are also embroiled in a territorial dispute over
islands that lie between them.
South Korea's foreign ministry said seven of the 23 sites were
run as forced labor camps, employing about 57,900 Koreans during
Japan's colonization of Korea, and 94 workers died there.
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Japan sees the sites as evidence of its industrial modernization,
and has said the UNESCO listing relates to their use in the period
before World War Two.
The Foreign Ministry in China, where there are bitter memories about
its occupation by Japan before and during World War Two, said UNESCO
applications should "not beautify the history of colonialism".
On Monday, Japan said UNESCO's advisory panel had backed the
application, recommending enlistment of the sites as World Heritage
locations at a June session of the U.N. cultural body.
South Korean officials plan to meet Japanese officials this month to
try and negotiate revisions to Tokyo's application, the ministry
said.
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Jack
Kim and Nick Macfie)
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