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"Peace Monument" recognizes "comfort women"

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"Peace Monument" recognizes "comfort women"

Peace Monument recognizes "comfort women"

Jeon Heon-Kyun/European Pressphoto Agency
A statue across from the Japanese embassy in Seoul was installed as a reminder of sexual slavery during World War II.

"The few "comfort women" who were willing to speak of their experiences reported that they were raped up to 30 times a day by soldiers and were beaten every day and night, for several years . . ." Louise Dulude

STATUE DEEPENS DISPUTE OVER WARTIME SEXUAL SLAVERY
by Choe Sang-Hun, December 15, 2011

SEOUL, South Korea — The unsmiling teenage girl in traditional Korean dress sits in a chair, her feet bare, her hands on her lap, her eyes fixed on the Japanese Embassy across a narrow street in central Seoul. Within a day, the life-size bronze statue had become the focal point of a simmering diplomatic dispute as President Lee Myung-bak prepared to visit Tokyo this weekend. The statue, named the Peace Monument, was financed with citizens’ donations and installed Wednesday, when five women in their 80s and 90s, who were among thousands forced into sexual slavery for the Japanese military during World War II, protested in front of the embassy, joined by their supporters. Such protests have been held weekly for almost 20 years.

For them and for many other Koreans, the statue — placed so that Japanese diplomats see it as they leave their embassy — carries a clear message: Japan should acknowledge what it did to as many as 200,000 Asian women, mostly Koreans, who historians say were forced or lured into working as prostitutes at frontline brothels for Japanese soldiers. The Japanese government’s main spokesman, the chief cabinet secretary Osamu Fujimura, called the installation of the statue “extremely regrettable” and said that his government would ask that it be removed ( . . . ) On Thursday, South Korea made it clear that it had no intention of forcing the protesters to remove the statue ( . . . )

The issue of “comfort women,” as they were called by the Japanese military, is among the most emotional disputes stemming from Japan’s colonial rule of Korea from 1910 to 1945. Japanese officials have apologized but insist that the issue was settled in the 1965 treaty that normalized relations between the two countries. In 1995, Japan offered to set up a $1 billion fund for the victims. But the women rejected this plan, because the money would have come from private donations, not from the government. They have been insisting on government reparations to individuals ( . . . ) Time is running out. In the 1990s, there were 234 Korean women willing to break decades of silence on their history as sex slaves. Now only 63 remain.

Excerpted from the New York Times, see: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/16/world/asia/statute-in-seoul-becomes-focal-point-of-dispute-between-south-korea-and-japan.html

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