South Korea's ageing victims of Japan's wartime sex slavery said Tuesday they would file a $20 million lawsuit next month at a US court to seek financial compensation from Tokyo.
The suit from 10 "comfort" women led by Kim Bok-Dong, 89, will be lodged at a California district court on July 1 against Japan, their attorney Kim Hyung-Jin told reporters.
The case, which is now being pursued in the US as previous suits in Japan have failed, also targets Mitsubishi and other companies allegedly involved in war crimes.
Originally a dozen women who were forced to serve Japanese soldiers during World War II had offered to join the legal battle, but two have since died.
"The Japanese government should offer an official and sincere apology for wrongdoings by their ancestors and restore our honour," Kim Bok-Dong told a press conference outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul.
Mainstream historians say up to 200,000 women, mainly from Korea but also from China, Indonesia and other Asian nations, were forced into sexual slavery during the war.
Japan insists the issue was settled in the 1965 normalisation agreement, which saw Tokyo make a total payment of $800 million in grants or loans to its former colony.
South Korea says Tokyo does not fully accept its guilt and has not sufficiently atoned.
The issue, which has remained in the background of diplomatic relations for the last few decades, has blistered to the fore since Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Park Geun-Hye came to power.
Park and Abe, however, gave a warmer impression in separate speeches on Monday as they marked the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Park has previously maintained there can be no meeting with Abe until Japan makes amends for its "comfort women" system.
But in a recent interview with the Washington Post, she said: "There has been considerable progress on the issue of the comfort women", adding that the two countries were "in the final stage" of negotiations.
GMT 22:34 2018 Monday ,22 January
Zeina Hashem Beck: I always had a love of words and it was always poetryGMT 16:02 2018 Sunday ,21 January
McDonald to replace Adams as Ireland's Sinn Fein chiefGMT 14:46 2018 Wednesday ,17 January
Second Emirati aid convey arrives in Al-Khokha, YemenGMT 16:30 2018 Tuesday ,16 January
First women-only car showroom opensGMT 16:26 2018 Tuesday ,16 January
2 Morocco female porters die in border stampedeGMT 16:22 2018 Tuesday ,16 January
Sri Lanka president restores banGMT 16:18 2018 Tuesday ,16 January
Dubai resident jailed for filming woman while she took bathGMT 21:29 2018 Sunday ,14 January
Japan's 'Virtual Currency Girls' debutMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor