Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Tokyo responsible for WWII sex slaves

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Tokyo responsible for WWII sex slaves

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-20 07:47

Former Japanese prime minister Tomiichi Murayama speaks to a Reuters
reporter during an interview in Tokyo March 19, 2007. Japan was morally
responsible for forcing women to work in wartime brothels, a former
Japanese leader said on Monday, in a veiled criticism of Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's comments on sex slaves. [Reuters]

TOKYO - Japan was morally responsible for forcing women to work in
wartime brothels, a former Japanese leader said on Monday, in a veiled
criticism of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's comments on sex slaves.

Former prime minister Tomiichi Murayama, who made a landmark apology for
Japan's wartime actions in 1995, also said efforts by politicians to
justify World War Two were making Asian neighbours worry Tokyo was
returning to its militarist past.

Abe sparked outrage overseas by saying there was no evidence that Japan's
government or army had kidnapped the women to work as sex slaves,
although he has also said he stands by a 1993 apology acknowledging
official involvement in the brothels.

Murayama, who became Japan's first Socialist prime minister in 40 years
when he was elected in 1994, said the debate over the degree of official
involvement was meaningless.

"There is no point in debating that. There is no mistake that the
military had set up and managed the brothels. In that sense, the
government was responsible," Murayama, 83, said in a rare interview.

"That's why the government has apologised, and because it felt that that
was not enough from a moral standpoint, began work to provide
compensation and set up the fund," he said, referring to the
government-sponsored Asian Women's Fund set up in 1995.

The fund -- headed by Murayama since 2000 -- has provided former comfort
women 2 million yen ($17,000) each in compensation and medical support,
along with a letter of apology signed by Abe's predecessors.

But many former "comfort women" have refused to accept the money, saying
the Japanese government itself should provide the compensation in
recognition of its responsibility.

MAKING ASIA NERVOUS

U.S. Congressman Michael Honda has introduced a resolution calling for
Japan to make an unambiguous apology for the suffering of the sex slaves
at the hands of its army.

Abe has said the resolution contains many factual errors and that Japan
would not apologise again, even if it is adopted.

Murayama welcomed Abe's decision to stand by the 1993 apology, but added
the 52-year-old Japanese leader might have made the situation worse with
some of his comments.

"He said things he didn't have to say," Murayama said, referring to Abe's
remark that he would not apologise anew.

Murayama said that in the years since he expressed "deep remorse" and a
"heartfelt apology" to Asian countries for Japan's wartime actions, a
growing number of Japanese politicians were trying to justify the
conflict, making Tokyo's neighbours wary.

Abe has also pledged to revise Japan's pacifist constitution during his
tenure, a stance that was long taboo.

"During my time, we couldn't even mention the idea of revising the
constitution. Now they're talking about it in parliament. Times have
changed," Murayama said.

"People in Asia are worried Japan may go back to the past," he added.

Murayama said the furore over the "comfort women" showed the activities
of the Asian Women's Fund were not well known.

"I wonder if people overseas know that past prime ministers have sent a
letter of remorse to each 'comfort woman' through the fund," said the
white-haired Murayama.

Since 1995, the fund has handled nearly 565 million yen in private
donations for compensation and about 750 million yen in government funds
for medical welfare support to women from the Philippines, South Korea,
Taiwan and the Netherlands.

Many of the thousands of sex slaves, which one academic has said numbered
about 200,000, have died due to old age. Most of the survivors are in
their 80s.

The fund is being wound up at the end of this month.

Top World News 

� Officials: 25 die in Russia mine blast

� Poll: Fear, anger, stress grip Iraqis

� Bomb hits US Embassy convoy in Kabul

� US: Dispute on N.Korea funds resolved

� US troop deaths show Sunni resilience

Today's Top News 

� Poll: Fear, anger, stress grip Iraqis

� US should look in mirror: Economist

� Major oil reserves discovered in Bohai

� Dialogue to clear defense doubts

� Thousands protesters against Iraq war

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

Learn Chinese, Chinese Online Class, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments: