Twelve South Korean women who were forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s military in World War II have sued the Seoul government over a deal it reached with Tokyo to pay the victims, saying it does not go far enough to establish Japan’s responsibility.
The plaintiffs are each seeking 100 million won (US$90,000) from the South Korean government, which they say failed to hold the Japanese government legally responsible when it agreed to the settlement in December last year, a spokesman from the Seoul Central District Court said yesterday. The spokesman asked not be named, citing office rules.
The lawsuit was submitted days after the South Korea Ministry of Foreign Affairs said surviving victims would each be eligible to receive about 100 million won from a foundation that is to be funded by the Japanese government.
The ministry said the families of deceased victims will receive about 20 million won, and added it expects the Japanese government to soon transfer a promised ¥1 billion (US$9.9 million) to the Seoul-based foundation launched in July.
Many in South Korea believe the Seoul government settled for far too less in the sex slave deal and that Japan still has not acknowledged legal responsibility for atrocities during its colonial occupation of the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945. Several South Korean victims, including at least six of the plaintiffs who sued the government, said through local media that they will reject payments offered from the foundation.
Under the December agreement, which was described by both governments as “irreversible,” Japan pledged to fund the foundation to help support the victims. However, Japan said it did not consider the ¥1 billion it promised to the fund as compensation, saying such issues were settled in a 1965 treaty that restored diplomatic ties and was accompanied by more than US$800 million in economic aid and loans from Tokyo to Seoul.
In exchange, South Korea vowed to refrain from criticizing Japan over the issue and said it would try to resolve a Japanese grievance over a statue of a girl representing victims of sexual slavery that sits in front of the Japanese embassy in downtown Seoul.
Historians say tens of thousands of women from around Asia, many of them Korean, were sent to frontline military brothels to provide sex to Japanese soldiers. At the time of the sex slave deal, Seoul said there were 46 surviving victims in South Korea.
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