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		South Korea urges dialogue with Japan in measured World War Two 
		anniversary message
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		 [August 15, 2019]  By 
		Hyonhee Shin and Linda Sieg 
 SEOUL/TOKYO (Reuters) - On the anniversary 
		of Japan's World War Two surrender, South Korea's president on Thursday 
		urged Japan to contemplate its wartime past and offered to engage in 
		talks to repair strained ties, while Japan pledged to never repeat the 
		horrors of war.
 
 Relations between Japan and South Korea are arguably at their lowest ebb 
		since they normalized ties in 1965, strained over the issue of South 
		Korean forced labor during World War Two and a bitter trade row.
 
 In a speech marking Korea's independence from Japanese rule, Moon dialed 
		down his recent harsh rhetoric towards Japan.
 
 "We hope that Japan will play a leading role together in facilitating 
		peace and prosperity in East Asia while it contemplates a past that 
		brought misfortune to its neighboring countries," said Moon.
 
 "Better late than never: if Japan chooses the path of dialogue and 
		cooperation, we will gladly join hands."
 
		
		 
		
 Moon's emphasis on talks was a departure from the stringent tone in 
		which he said South Korea "will never be defeated again by Japan".
 
 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Thursday sent a ritual monetary 
		offering to the controversial Yasukuni shrine for war dead in Tokyo. He 
		did not visit in person, an act which would have sparked a heated 
		reaction from Seoul.
 
 Seoul's foreign ministry expressed "deep concerns" over Abe sending the 
		offering to a shrine that "beautifies Japan's colonial pillage and 
		aggressive war".
 
 Bitter memories of Japan's 1910-45 colonization of Korea have long 
		haunted ties.
 
 At a ceremony honoring war dead, Abe said Japan had engraved the 
		"lessons of history deep in our hearts", and pledged never to repeat its 
		devastation.
 
 "To create a peaceful new era full of hope, we will spare no effort in 
		working with the international community."
 
 DIPLOMACY BACK ON TRACK?
 
 Relations deteriorated after South Korea's Supreme Court last year 
		ordered Japanese companies to compensate some wartime forced laborers. 
		Tokyo says the matter was settled by a 1965 treaty normalizing ties.
 
 The chill deepened when Japan ended South Korea's fast-track trade 
		status this month, prompting Seoul to follow suit.
 
 Tokyo has cited security concerns for its tightening of export controls, 
		which South Korea called retaliation over the forced labor feud.
 
 Strained ties between the two key U.S. allies have worried Washington, 
		which fears weakened security cooperation in the face of North Korea's 
		threat and China's rise.
 
 Japanese and South Korean vice foreign ministers reportedly plan to meet 
		this week in Guam to discuss the issue.
 
 Leif-Eric Easley, who teaches international relations at Ewha University 
		in Seoul, said Moon's speech was meant to "leave the door open for 
		diplomacy".
 
 "Recent escalation demonstrated a lack of appreciation for the economic 
		interests at stake, for the other side's domestic politics, and for the 
		severe regional security situation," he said.
 
 'BITTER AND FURIOUS'
 
 In downtown Seoul, thousands of South Koreans in raincoats, including 
		some victims of forced labor, staged a massive rally, marching toward 
		the Japanese embassy and chanting "Fight!" and "Compensate!"
 
		
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			Women hold signs that read "Compensate and apologize for victims of 
			wartime forced labour" during an anti-Japan protest on Liberation 
			Day in Seoul, South Korea, August 15, 2019. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji 
            
			 
Holding a banner saying "No Abe, No Mitsubishi," Yang Geum-deuk, 90, said she 
was given barely any food and often beaten by Japanese authorities for not 
quickly using the bathroom while at Mitsubishi.
 "We Koreans were treated as animals," Yang said. "But we're strong now ... and 
my wish is to hear a word of apology from Abe, as the world knows how we 
suffered in Japan."
 
 New emperor Naruhito, speaking at the same ceremony as Abe, expressed "deep 
remorse" over Japan's wartime past and prayed for global peace in remarks that 
echoed those of his father, Akihito.
 
 Past visits by Japanese leaders to Yasukuni have outraged South Korea because 
the shrine honors 14 Japanese convicted as war criminals.
 
 Abe has only visited once since taking office in 2012, but has regularly sent 
offerings on major occasions.
 
 Ruling party lawmaker Tomomi Inada, a former defense minister and now special 
aide to Abe, made the shrine offering on behalf of the premier, whom she quoted 
as thanking those who gave their lives for their homeland and contributed to 
Japan's peace and prosperity, domestic media said.
 
 A steady stream of visitors paid their respects at Yasukuni, while police, some 
in anti-riot gear, patrolled nearby. A sign on the grounds warned that 
activities such as hoisting flags, demonstrating or destroying property were 
banned.
 
 "The people enshrined here fought for Japan and we have come to express our 
gratitude and to show them our resolve to build a better Japan," said Yoshiko 
Matsuura, 71, a former ward assembly member from Tokyo visiting with other local 
politicians.
 
 
'ONE KOREA'
 In his Liberation Day speech, Moon laid out ambitious goals for ties with North 
Korea, vowing efforts for a successful joint hosting of the 2032 Olympics and 
unification by 2045, which will mark the 100th anniversary of liberation.
 
 Moon called for Pyongyang and Washington to resume nuclear talks as soon as 
possible, which speed not only efforts to give up nuclear weapons but business 
ties between the neighbors.
 
 "When economic cooperation accelerates and the peace economy begins, unification 
will beckon," Moon said.
 
 "I pledge to solidify the foundation so that we can ... stand tall in the world 
as one Korea by achieving peace and unification by 2045."
 
 Such goals have long been considered distant, but the comments come at a 
sensitive time, amid a series of missile tests by the North, stalled nuclear 
talks and a virtual halt in communications between the neighbors.
 
 "The 'One Korea' plan could sound like a grand vision but may well end up as an 
empty promise without a clear, shared understanding of denuclearization to 
advance dialogue and concrete action plans," said Kim Hong-kyun, a former South 
Korean nuclear envoy.
 
 (Additional reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Tim Kelly, Chris Gallagher and Elaine 
Lies in TOKYO and Daewoung Kim and Youngseo Choi in SEOUL; Editing by Michael 
Perry)
 
				 
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