Deutsche Welle, 18 March 2013
Japan believes it has apologized sufficiently for the excesses of its military in the first half of the last century, but its neighbors feel the government in Tokyo continues to gloss over the atrocities.
Japan believes it has apologized sufficiently for the excesses of its military in the first half of the last century, but its neighbors feel the government in Tokyo continues to gloss over the atrocities.
Japan's
neighbors feel that the right-of-center government is again planning to gloss
over the atrocities wrought upon the rest of Asia in the 20th century. The
issue of "comfort women", in particular, is likely to be the first
place any revisions to history are likely to be seen, argue Tokyo's detractors.
South Korea
and China are stepping up their demands that Japan face up to its sexual
enslavement of thousands of women - euphemistically known as "comfort
women" - across large parts of Asia in the 1930s and 1940s.
Representatives of the two governments told the United Nations' Human Rights
Council that it was high time Japan apologized and provided compensation.
Choi
Seok-young, the South Korena ambassador to the UN in Geneva, told the council
on Thursday (14.03.2013) that, "Japan must accept legal responsibility and
take appropriate measures."
That
opinion was echoed by the delegation of the Philippines, while China's Liu
Zhenmin demanded that Tokyo provide redress.
Takashi
Okada, Japan's deputy ambassador to the UN, was quick to reply that his nation
had already done its best to make amends and urged other nations not to turn
the comfort women into a political issue.
'Immeasurable
pain'
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| Protesters in South Korea have repeatedly demanded compensation from Japan for wartime sex slaves |
In that
statement, which admitted that Japan had "at times" recruited women
"against their will," Kono made "sincere apologies" for the
"immeasurable pain and suffering" inflicted on comfort women. Tokyo maintained,
however, that all issues of compensation had been settled by the 1965
Japan-South Korea treaty and the 1951 San Francisco Peace Treaty.
Historians
have estimated that around 200,000 women - primarily from China, Korea and the
Philippines - were forced to provide sexual services to troops of the Imperial
Japanese forces, although there are many in Japan who believe the scale of the
problem has been vastly exaggerated. Others argue that comfort women were
little more than licensed prostitutes who were paid well for their services,
while others were sold into the sex trade by impoverished parents. In either
case, they claim, Japan cannot be held responsible.
Some have
gone as far as to suggest that the Kono Statement be withdrawn, while there are
indications that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is planning to oversee a major
reconsideration of Japan's self-perception of history if he fares well in
elections for the Upper House of parliament in July.
There are
also plans afoot to alter the Japanese constitution, giving the military more
leeway in handling international disputes. Furthermore, revisions to an
education system that some conservatives have criticized as
"masochistic" are also being considered, as is a harder line in
dealing with China and South Korea in everything from territorial issues to the
different perceptions of history.
No evidence
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| Prime Minister Abe is said to be planning changes to the Japanese constitution |
That
opinion is shared by nationalist groups, including the Society for the
Dissemination of Historical Fact. Hiromichi Moteki, secretary general of the
group, says his aim is to translate books and historical documents and to
provide that information to scholars and historians around the world so that
they might re-evaluate the"evil empire" image of Japan of the early
decades of the last century.
Moteki
dismisses the latest Chinese and South Korean complaints to the UN as
"ridiculous."
"These
allegations are all fabricated," he insists. "They have no basis in
fact at all and we have verified these facts."
Several
historians have written papers on the accuracy of the comfort women's claims
and how they came to be in the sex industry, with Moteki's group unsurprisingly
promoting documents that support its position.
Kohyu
Nishimura, for example, concluded in a paper issued earlier this year that
"anti-Japanese agitators" are bending historical facts to
psychologically "weaken and degrade" the Japanese people. And at the
heart of this operation are "China and Korea and their anti-Japanese
fellow travelers, which doggedly repeat the same malicious claims against
Japan."
Lashing out
at Japan
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| One of the last Korean 'comfort women' is still demanding an apology |
But
Moteki's protestations are arguably tarnished by the society's claims that
Japan was not to blame for any of the terrible things that happened across Asia
in the early decades of the last century.
He claims
that China triggered the Sino-Japanese War in August 1937. He maintains that
there was no massacre of 300,000 civilians in Nanking four months later and
that the United States provoked Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, while
the annexation of the Korean Peninsula in the 1930s was inevitable because the
kingdom was unable to maintain its independence. Moteki also argues that
Japanese control brought great benefits to the Korean people in the form of
schools, hospitals and infrastructure.
Whatever
the truth behind the claims and counter-claims, Prime Minister Abe must be
aware that any attempt to rewrite history poses a significant threat of
triggering a new outbreak of fury among Japan's already fractious neighbors.




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