Japanese politician calls wartime sex slaves 'necessary'
Mayor: 'Comfort women' were necessary
Toru Hashimoto, who
serves as the Mayor of Osaka, told reporters at his weekly press
conference Monday that "anyone would understand" the role of "comfort
women" when soldiers were risking their lives and you wanted to give
them "a rest."
Though he acknowledged
the issue was a "tragic result of war," Hashimoto, who is co-leader of
the nationalist Japan Restoration Party, insisted the use of prostitutes
by soldiers was not unique to Japan.
Bizarrely, Hashimoto also
revealed that he told a U.S. military commander during a trip to a base
on the island of Okinawa that the adult entertainment business in Japan
should be "utilized more" by U.S. personnel.
Korean 'Comfort women' demand justice
Ignoring Japan's comfort women
"I told him there are
places that operate within the boundaries of the law which can be used
for releasing sexual frustration, so they [the U.S. military] should
fully utilize it or the marines won't be able to control their
aggressive sexual desires."
He said the officer refused to discuss the suggestion.
Reaction at home
Hashimoto's comments also found little support among political colleagues at home.
"A series of remarks by
Japanese politicians related to our interpretation of [wartime] history
have been misunderstood," Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura told
reporters at his weekly press conference Tuesday. "In that sense Mr.
Hashimoto's remarks came at a bad time. [But] I wonder if there is any
positive meaning to intentionally make such remarks at this particular
moment? As for the remarks about adult entertainment, I could not
believe that it came from a man representing a political party."
Fellow minister Tomomi
Inada asked: "I wonder is this something the representative of a
political party should say? I myself think the comfort women [issue]
infringed the human rights of the women."
Chief Cabinet Spokesman
Yoshihide Suga did not respond directly to Hashimoto's comments but
instead told reporters "the stance of the Japanese government on the
comfort women issue is, as it has been stated repeatedly in the past,
that they suffered unspeakably painful experiences and we keenly feel
the pain when we think about them."
Sex slaves
Many of the 200,000
women whom historians estimate were forced to become sex slaves for
Japan's former Imperial Army were from the Philippines, China and the
Korean peninsula -- all occupied territories at the time. While many
have now died, a group of Korean survivors has spent years protesting
outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul. They demand greater recognition
of their suffering, as well as individual compensation.
They suffered unspeakably painful experiences and we keenly feel the pain when we think about them.
Chief Cabinet Spokesman Yoshihide Suga
Chief Cabinet Spokesman Yoshihide Suga
Tokyo maintains its
legal liability for wrongdoing was cleared by a bilateral treaty signed
in 1965 with South Korea. For its part, the Seoul government expressed
"deep disappointment" over Hashimoto's comments.
"There is worldwide
recognition... that the issue of comfort women amounts to a wartime rape
committed by Japan during its past imperial period in a serious breach
of human rights," a foreign ministry spokesman told Agence France-Presse
Tuesday.
"Our government again
urges Japan's prominent officials to show regret for atrocities
committed during Japan's imperial period and to correct their
anachronistic way of thinking and comments."
In 1993, the Japanese
government released a statement acknowledging the "immeasurable pain and
suffering" endured by thousands of women forced to have sex during
World War II. It even vowed to include the comfort women issue in new
junior high school textbooks for the first time.
But Japan's wartime past
continues to loom over its relations with key Asian neighbors such as
South Korea and China, which are currently strained by territorial
disputes in the region.
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