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Korean WWII sex slaves fight on
By William Horsley
August 11, 2005

Former sex slaves are still demanding official
compensation |
"Japan - reveal the truth! Admit the crime! Officially apologise! Punish the
criminals!" South Korean protesters chant every Wednesday outside the Japanese
Embassy in Seoul.
In their midst, a small group of elderly women sit silently.
They are the survivors of the brutal, Asia-wide system of sex slaves for the
Imperial Japanese Army, which the military government encouraged and helped to
operate for 13 years, from 1932 until the end of World War II in 1945.
They were euphemistically called "comfort women". But experts like Korean
American scholar Edward Chang of the University of California say the network
of "comfort stations" were actually officially-sanctioned rape camps.
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Many of the women were even killed as part of an attempt to cover up the crime.
"There should be no time limit on prosecuting these crimes against humanity,"
Prof Chang said.
Japan says all potential claims by individuals for sufferings inflicted in the
war were closed years ago, by treaties normalising its ties with other Asian
countries.
But Kang Kyung-wha, a senior official at South Korea's foreign ministry, has
recently urged Japan to come to terms with its "legal responsibility" and human
rights obligations towards the former comfort women.
Repeatedly abused
Kim Gunja, now aged 80, is too frail to attend the Wednesday demonstrations.
Her story is typical of the tens of thousands - some estimates say 200,000 -
women from across Asia whose lives were ruined when they became military sex
slaves to the Japanese.
At the age of 17, she was tricked into being abducted by a Korean middle-man
who delivered large numbers of young women and girls to his country's then
Japanese colonial masters.
Kim Gunja suspects that her foster father, a policeman, sold her for money or
promotion.

Kim Gunja is especially angry at current Japanese
leaders |
She was taken by train to the so-called comfort stations for the Japanese army
in Manchuria, north-east China, where she says she was raped by the soldiers
many times a day for three years.
"The soldiers didn't know when they would die, and they were very cruel," she
said.
She was beaten so badly that she lost her hearing in one ear. After the war she
could never marry or get a good job.
She still cannot forgive. And she saves her fiercest hatred for current
Japanese leaders.
She wants them to show sincere atonement for Japan's past wrongdoings and to
take responsibility by paying official compensation.
Facing up to the past
Japan stands accused of a series of evasions in facing up to the military sex
slave issue.
According to Mr Chang, Japan's first admission of involvement only came in
1991, after a wartime document came to light in the foreign ministry about the
granting of travel permits for Asian women in areas occupied by the Japanese
army.
He says that, since then, the Japanese authorities have continued to hinder the
search for detailed evidence about the fate of the former comfort women.
But his own research team's trawl through America's national archives has
produced a sheaf of files captured by the US army from the retreating Japanese
forces.
They contain photos and other personal details of dozens of young Filipino
women - evidence, he says, of the most extensive system of female trafficking
the world has ever seen.
Since 1992 Japanese prime ministers have all made formal apologies for the war.
But Shin Hae-soo, head of the Korean council supporting the former military
sexual slaves, believes these statements are just empty words.
Only legal reparations, she says, will suffice to acknowledge what she sees as
war crimes.
In Japan, a recent opinion poll showed that only 13% of the population think
further apologies to Asian countries are needed.

Many in South Korea cannot just forget the past |
In 1995 the Japanese government took its boldest step so far, setting up an
Asian Women's Fund, which collected private donations and sent "atonement
money" worth $30,000 or more to each of 364 former comfort women in Taiwan, the
Philippines and South Korea.
It also directly funded medical care for the recipients.
A director of the fund, Yasuaki Onuma, acknowledges the criticism of Japan's
slow and limited response.
But he also holds some hard-line South Korean campaigners responsible for the
impasse.
Many of the Korean victims, he says, were put under intense social pressures to
refuse the Japanese donations, although they sorely needed that support.
It was recently decided that the fund will shut down within two years.
So the poison from past cruelties will be passed on to a new generation of
Koreans and Japanese.
Kim Gunja now lives near Seoul in a home for former comfort women supported by
the South Korean government. She says she hopes Japan will reveal the truth and
offer her official compensation.
"Otherwise", she said, "I will not be able to close my eyes when I die."
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©
2005 Asian Sex Gazette.
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