South Korea to drop Japan from its fast-track trade 'white list'
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[August 12, 2019]
By Jane Chung and Heekyong Yang
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea said on
Monday it plans to drop Japan from its "white list" of countries with
fast-track trade status from September, a tit-for-tat move that deepens
a diplomatic and trade rift between the two countries.
The tighter trade regulations, including potential lengthy permit
application processes, will apply to South Korean exports to Japan.
Industry Minister Sung Yun-mo said that Japan would be put in a
newly-created trade category of countries that have not run their export
control systems in line with "international export control principles".
Park Tae-sung, a senior South Korean trade ministry official, added that
Japan had been designated the first country in the new group because of
inappropriate trade practices, but did not provide details.
Relations between the two countries have soured since a ruling by South
Korea's Supreme Court last year that Japanese companies should
compensate South Koreans who were conscripted as forced laborers during
World War Two.
The Japanese government did not immediately issue a public response to
Monday’s announcement, but a senior foreign ministry official told
broadcaster NHK that a response would come after more analysis of the
details of South Korea’s decision.
Another foreign ministry official said that Tokyo was not expecting an
immediate impact, NHK reported.
Japan announced earlier this month that it was removing South Korea from
its own "white list" of countries that have enjoyed minimum trade
restrictions, citing an erosion of trust.
That followed Japan's imposition in July of tighter curbs on exports to
South Korea of materials used to make smartphone chips, South Korea's
top export item. Tokyo last week granted the first shipment of high-tech
materials to South Korea since those restrictions were enforced.
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A truck drives between shipping containers at a container terminal
at Incheon port in Incheon, South Korea, May 26, 2016. REUTERS/Kim
Hong-Ji/File Photo
South Korean President Moon Jae-in said Japan's economic retaliation
is not only intrinsically unfair, but unjust because it stems from
Japan's colonial-era abuses.
Still, South Koreans should not react emotionally and should
maintain constructive ties with the Japanese people, Moon said at a
meeting of senior aides on Monday.
"We should take deep breaths to consider a fundamental
countermeasure in a vehement yet calm manner," he said.
In a bid to cut its reliance on Japanese imports, South Korea last
week announced plans to invest about 7.8 trillion won ($6.48
billion) in research and development for local materials, parts and
equipment over seven years.
"The government will pursue an elaborate and detailed strategy to
more substantively develop our economy by taking Japan's economic
retaliation as a chance to turn good out of evil," Moon said.
Sung said he was ready to talk with Japanese officials any time
Tokyo requests a meeting.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang and Jane Chung; Additional reporting by
Ju-min Park and Hyonhee Shin in SEOUL, and Elaine Lies in TOKYO;
Editing by Jane Wardell and Michael Perry)
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