Japan recalls envoy to South Korea over comfort-woman statue | Inquirer News

Japan recalls envoy to South Korea over comfort-woman statue

/ 12:25 PM January 06, 2017

South Korea Japan Sex Slaves

A college student places flowers next to the statue of a girl representing victims of Japanese sexual slavery in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2016. South Korea’s opposition politicians on Wednesday called for nullifying a settlement reached between Seoul and Tokyo on compensation for South Korean women forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s military in World War II. AP

TOKYO — Japan is recalling its ambassador to South Korea in response to the placing of a comfort-woman statue in front of its consulate in the Korean city of Busan.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga (yoh-shee-hee-deh soo-gah) said Friday that both the ambassador in Seoul and the consul-general in Busan would be temporarily recalled.

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Many Korean and other women in Asia were forced to work in brothels for the Japanese military during World War II in what was called the “comfort-woman” system.

Japan and South Korea reached an agreement to resolve their differences over the issue in late 2015, but some South Koreans have continued to protest. A comfort-woman statue has remained standing in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul, and a similar one was put up in Busan recently./rga

READ: South Korean foundation launched to help former Japan sex slaves

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TAGS: ambassador, Japan, South korea, World War II

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