City
Epaper

S.Korean Prez ready to sit with Japan over forced labour issue

By IANS | Updated: August 15, 2020 13:00 IST

Seoul, Aug 15 South Korean President Moon Jae-in said on Saturday that his government was ready to sit ...

Open in App

Seoul, Aug 15 South Korean President Moon Jae-in said on Saturday that his government was ready to sit face-to-face with Japan to resolve a long-drawn-out issue of forced labour during World War II.

"Our government is ready to sit face-to-face with the Japanese government at any time," Moon said in a televised address to mark the 75th anniversary of the Korean Peninsula's liberation from the 1910-45 Japanese colonial rule.

"The government respects the judiciary's ruling, and has consulted with Japan's government on a smooth resolution, to which the (South Korean) victims can agree," Xinhua news agency quoted the President as saying.

Moon noted that South Korea currently left the door of consultations with Japan "wide open" over the forced labor issue.

Four South Korean victims, who were forced into heavy labour without pay during the colonial era, field a damages lawsuit in 2005 against a Japanese steelmaker.

Among the four victims, Lee Chun-sik is the only surviving plaintiff.

It was followed by other wartime forced labour victims and their families lodging compensation suits against Japanese companies.

South Korea's Supreme Court delivered a ruling in 2018 that ordered some of Japanese companies to pay reparation to the victims.

Japan has claimed that all colonial-era issues were settled through a 1965 bilateral treaty that normalized diplomatic relations between the two countries, but the South Korean top court ruled that the state-to-state deal did not involve individuals' right to reparation.

Referring to the surviving plaintiff, Moon said: "We will confirm the fact that protecting the dignity of an individual will never be a loss to the country."

In an apparent protest against the top court's ruling, Japan tightened control in July last year over its export of three materials vital to producing memory chips and display panels that are the mainstay of South Korea's export.

In August 2019, Japan dropped South Korea off its whitelist of trusted trading partners that are given preferential export procedure.

In response, Seoul removed Tokyo from its whitelist of trusted export partners.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: seoulXinhuaTokyoSupreme Court
Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraSupreme Court Allows Sunil Shukla to Approach Bombay HC Seeking FIR Against Raj Thackeray, Derecognition of MNS Party

Mumbai2006 Mumbai Train Blasts Case: Supreme Court Stays Bombay High Court Order Acquitting 12 Accused

NationalSupreme Court Asks MEA to Trace Russian Woman and Return Child's Custody To Father

NationalRecording Phone calls Is Not Violation of Privacy in Marital Disputes, Says SC

NationalSupreme Court Issues Notice to Bihar and Delhi Governments Over Minor Girl's Plea Against Forced Child Marriage

International Realted Stories

InternationalHamas agrees to Red Cross aid for Israeli hostages amid Gaza starvation crisis

InternationalPakistan Foreign Minister to visit Bangladesh this month

InternationalFrench parliamentarians call out China's narrative in disputed Indo-Pacific report

InternationalUN alerts worsening drought endangering Afghanistan's food security

InternationalUS senators move to counter China's diplomatic sabotage in Latin America with pro-Taiwan bill