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Learn mandarin - 'Comfort women' historian alarmed

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

'Comfort women' historian alarmed

(AFP)
Updated: 2007-03-12 07:17

TOKYO - Fifteen years ago, a Japanese history professor's discovery of
documents proving the military was involved in organised sexual slavery
forced Tokyo into a landmark apology to the thousands of Korean women
affected.

Now, Yoshiaki Yoshimi says he is alarmed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's
apparent backtracking on the issue, and accuses the Japanese leader of
denying the facts when he said there was no evidence the imperial army
coerced so-called "comfort women."

Japanese Chuo University professor Yoshiaki Yoshimi displays an evidence
of Japanese troops' involvement in wartime sex slavery two decades ago at
his laboratory in Tokyo, 08 March 2007.[AFP]

"I'm very worried about the current political situation. The prime
minister and other politicians in important posts seem to be denying
fundamental facts about the issue," Yoshimi said.

Yoshimi, a professor at Tokyo's Chuo University, said he first stumbled
upon a document in the 1980s that showed the military issued orders to
set up brothels for front line troops.

According to the document, the chief of staff of Japanese troops
occupying northern China wanted the brothels to stop soldiers raping
Chinese women and stirring up local anger.

Historians believe by the end of the war up to 200,000 women served in
brothels for Japanese troops across Asia.

"I was very surprised, because it was one of the first official documents
that showed the direct involvement of Japanese authorities," Yoshimi told
AFP.

"I knew it was a very important document, so I kept it safe for a few
years."

When South Korean former comfort women first came forward in December
1991 to tell their stories, Yoshimi was driven to action.

He went to the library of the Defence Agency, now the Defence Ministry,
and after two days of searching found documents proving that the Japanese
military was responsible for comfort women.

Yoshimi's research appeared in the influential Asahi Shimbun newspaper on
January 11, 1992, and a day later, the government pledged to investigate.

In 1993, the chief government spokesman issued a statement voicing
"sincere apologies and remorse" and acknowledging the imperial army was
involved "directly or indirectly" in sexual slavery.

But Abe, who is known for his conservative views on history, has promised
to assist a new investigation by the ruling party into comfort women --
the first step to a possible revision of the 1993 statement.

"There was no coercion such as kidnappings by the Japanese authorities.
There is no reliable testimony that proves kidnapping," Abe said this
month.

Abe, while saying he stood by the 1993 apology, argued that economic
conditions and sex brokers may have pressured women to work in brothels.

Yoshimi, a silver-haired 60-year-old whose office is crammed with books,
quietly decried Abe's remarks.

"It is clear that there was coercion of those women into sexual slavery
and it is the Japanese authorities who decided to set up wartime
brothels," he said, holding up photocopies of the documents he found.

"The government was the protagonist in this business and brokers were
just tools of the government. It was by no means the other way around."

The soft-spoken professor said he has received threatening telephone
calls and letters, one reading, "You must die!", since he first published
his findings.

Even if the government lets the 1993 statement stand, Yoshimi said, the
backlash has taken a toll. He said none of the history textbooks now used
by junior high school students make clear reference to "comfort women."

"There is some sentiment that it is impossible to admit wrongdoing. It's
a way of asserting cultural self-confidence, especially since the
collapse of the bubble economy" in the early 1990s, he said.

Abe's government has furiously rejected a bill before the US Congress,
which is more likely to pass since the Democrats took control in January,
and which would demand Japan make an outright admission and apology over
comfort women.

Yoshimi has signed a petition supporting the bill, saying that Japan's
conservative leaders will be more likely to respond to criticism from the
US than from China, which frequently spars with Tokyo on history issues.

"I expect the US legislation will be a positive factor in correcting the
current conservative backlash in Japan," Yoshimi said. "It's probably
impossible for Abe to refuse advice from such an important ally."

Yoshimi hopes to publish a new book with fresh testimony from former
comfort women.

"I don't see myself as taking a political role. I see myself as exposing
the truth," he said. "Doing this may not always be in the interests of
Japan. But that's the role of the historian."

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