Tokyo angered after South Korea court orders Japan to compensate
'comfort women'
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[January 08, 2021]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - A South Korean court for
the first time on Friday ordered Japan to compensate 12 women who were
forced to work in its wartime brothels, a ruling that drew a rebuke from
Tokyo and threatened to rekindle a diplomatic feud between the two
countries.
Reminders of Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula are
contentious for both sides, with many surviving "comfort women" - a
Japanese euphemism for the sex abuse victims - demanding Tokyo's formal
apology and compensation.
Japan says the issue was settled under a 1965 treaty that normalised
diplomatic ties, and the two countries agreed to "irreversibly" end the
dispute in a 2015 deal.
But the Seoul Central District Court, a lower tier court, ordered Japan
pay each of the women 100 million won ($91,000), saying neither of the
pacts can cover their right to seek compensation.
Amnesty International said it was the first time a domestic court had
recognised that Japan's government was accountable for the wartime
brothels.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said Japan could not accept the court
ruling and said the lawsuit should be dropped.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato called the verdict
"unacceptable," urging Seoul to take "appropriate measures". Vice
Foreign Minister Takeo Akiba summoned South Korean Ambassador Nam
Gwan-pyo to lodge an "extremely strong protest".
Ambassador Nam said that he would strive to prevent the ruling from
having an "undesirable impact" on ties.
South Korea's foreign ministry said it respects the court ruling, though
it acknowledges the 2015 pact was a formal agreement. It will also make
efforts to ensure the two countries will continue constructive
cooperation as it reviews the impact of the ruling on diplomatic
relations, the ministry said in a statement.
"I emphasised that it was most important for both sides to respond in a
calm, restrained manner in order to resolve the issue," Nam told
reporters after being called in.
'NOT FOR MONEY'
After taking office in 2017, South Korean President Moon Jae-in
effectively nullified the 2015 settlement, in which Japan issued an
official apology and provided 1 billion yen ($9.6 million) to a fund to
help comfort women victims.
Some historians estimate up to 200,000 Korean girls and women were
forced to provide sex to Japanese troops during the colonial era,
sometimes under the pretext of employment or to pay off a relative's
debt.
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Japan's new Chief of Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato announces new
cabinet members at a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, September 16,
2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
"It was a crime against humanity that was systematically,
deliberately and extensively committed by Japan in breach of
international norms," Justice Kim Jeong-gon said in the ruling.
"Even if it was a country's sovereign act, state immunity cannot be
applied as it was committed against our citizens on the Korean
peninsula that was illegally occupied by Japan."
Only 16 registered Korean survivors are still alive, and six of the
12 victims have died since they initiated the lawsuit in 2016.
The women's lawyer, Kim Kang-won, said he was "deeply moved" as the
ruling acknowledged the Japanese government was accountable for the
atrocity.
Kim Dae-wol at the House of Sharing, a shelter for the women, said
two of five plaintiffs who live there were healthy enough to
remotely monitor the trial and they welcomed the ruling.
"They said it's never enough even if Japan pays tens of times more,
but they don't put much meaning on compensation," he told reporters.
"They just want Japan to apologise and let more of its people know,
so that there will no longer be such war crimes."
South Korea and Japan, both staunch U.S. allies, are key trade
partners and share other common interests, including fending off
North Korea's growing nuclear and missile threats.
But relations have deteriorated as historical rows flared in recent
years, affecting trade and security arrangements, especially after
South Korea's Supreme Court ordered two Japanese firms to compensate
some wartime forced labourers.
The former labourers have sought to seize and sell some of the
Japanese companies' assets in South Korea as compensation, which
Tokyo had warned would bring a "serious situation."
Kim, the comfort women's lawyer, said he will look into ways to
enforce the court order.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka,
Elaine Lies and Rocky Swift in Tokyo, Sangmi Cha in Seoul; Editing
by Michael Perry, Lincoln Feast and Kim Coghill)
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