Back To Top

Japan's consulate meets Busan ward chief over 'comfort women' statue

BUSAN -- The Japanese Consulate in the southern South Korean port city of Busan on Wednesday exerted indirect pressure on the city's Dong Ward municipality to remove a statue symbolizing Korean women forced to work in wartime Japanese military brothels, officials at the regional government said.

Japan's consul general in Busan, Yasuhiro Morimoto held talks with Park Sam-seok, chief of the municipality, earlier in the day as he offered to pay a courtesy call. Morimoto returned along with Japanese Ambassador to South Korea Yasumasa Nagamine on April 4 after the two were recalled to Japan in January over the statue erected by a citizens' group in front of the consulate.

This file photo, dated Jan. 6, 2017, shows the main gate of the Japanese Consulate in the southern South Korean port city of Busan. (Yonhap)
This file photo, dated Jan. 6, 2017, shows the main gate of the Japanese Consulate in the southern South Korean port city of Busan. (Yonhap)

During the talks at Park's office, Morimoto was quoted as saying by the officials, "In Japan, there is negative sentiment toward the statue in front of the consulate," expressing uneasy feelings toward it.

According to the officials, Park said the issue should be resolved through dialogue with the Japanese government after South Korea's next administration comes to office and the Dong municipality has nothing to do with it any longer. Park, who met with Morimoto in December when the statue was installed, also reiterated his position that the statue would not be removed during his term of office, the officials said.

South Korea is set to hold a presidential election on May 9 following the impeachment and ousting of President Park Geun-hye over a corruption and abuse-of-power scandal.

Tokyo has claimed that a statue commemorating the victims before its consulate in Busan, along with another standing in front of its embassy in Seoul, runs counter to a Seoul-Tokyo deal in 2015 to resolve the long-running rift over Japan's wartime sexual enslavement of Korean women.

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.

Critics in Seoul demand the cancellation of the accord, saying that the Japanese government still refuses to recognize its legal responsibility and denies 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 South Korean victims are still alive and mostly in their late 80s. (Yonhap)

MOST POPULAR
LATEST NEWS
subscribe
피터빈트