BBC News, 14
May 2013
Related
Stories
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| Toru Hashimoto said former comfort women should be offered "kind words" |
Osaka Mayor
Toru Hashimoto said on Monday that the "comfort women" gave Japanese
soldiers a chance "to rest".
On Tuesday,
Japanese ministers tried to distance themselves from his remarks.
Some
200,000 women in territories occupied by Japan during WWII are estimated to
have been forced to become sex slaves for troops.
Many of the
women came from China and South Korea, but also from the Philippines, Indonesia
and Taiwan.
Japan's
treatment of its wartime role has been a frequent source of tension with its
neighbours, and South Korea expressed "deep disappointment" at Mr
Hashimoto's words.
"There
is a worldwide recognition... that the issue of comfort women amounts to a
war-time rape committed by Japan during its past imperial period in a serious
breach of human rights," a South Korean foreign ministry spokesman told
news agency AFP.
Mr
Hashimoto is the co-founder of the nationalist Japanese Restoration Party,
which has a small presence in parliament and is not part of the government.
He was the
youngest governor in Japanese history before becoming mayor of Osaka, and last
year said Japan needed "a dictatorship".
In his
latest comments, quoted by Japanese media, he said: "In the circumstances
in which bullets are flying like rain and wind, the soldiers are running around
at the risk of losing their lives,"
"If
you want them to have a rest in such a situation, a comfort women system is
necessary. Anyone can understand that."
He
acknowledged that the women had been acting "against their will". He
also claimed that Japan was not the only country to use the system, though it
was responsible for its actions.
He said he
backed a 1995 statement by Japan's then-PM Tomiichi Murayama, in which he
apologised for war-time actions in Asia.
"It is
a result of the tragedy of the war that they became comfort women against their
will. The responsibility for the war also lies with Japan. We have to politely
offer kind words to [former] comfort women."
'Historic
given'
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| Recent visits to Japan's war-linked Yasukuni shrine sparked protests in South Korea |
He said the
government felt "pains towards people who experienced hardships that are
beyond description".
In 1993,
Japan issued an apology for the "immeasurable pain and suffering"
inflicted on comfort women. In 1995, it also apologised for its war-time
aggression.
Education
Minister Hakubun Shimomura also expressed concerns over Mr Hashimoto's remarks.
"A
series of remarks related to our interpretation of (wartime) history have been
already misunderstood," he told reporters. "In that sense, Mr
Hashimoto's remark came at a bad time."
Last month,
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe angered China and South Korea when he
suggested he may no longer stand by the wording of Japan's 1995 apology, saying
the definition of "aggression" was hard to establish.
Japanese
ministers later sought to play down his remarks, amid anger across the region.
Japan's
neighbours also objected to visits in April by several cabinet members and 170
MPs to Japan's Yasukuni shrine, which honours Japan's war dead, including war
criminals.
Related Articles:
Majority Reject Japan Mayor on Comfort Women: Poll
Japan mayor's sex slave remarks 'outrageous' - US
Majority Reject Japan Mayor on Comfort Women: Poll
Japan mayor's sex slave remarks 'outrageous' - US


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