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Comfort women issue poses potential pitfall

China Daily | Updated: 2017-12-20 09:19
ROK, Japan face obstacles in attempt at united front

SEOUL - The Republic of Korea's Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha is set to make her first visit to Japan for talks with her Japanese counterpart, amid growing concern that a controversial bilateral comfort women agreement could cast a cloud over the meeting.

Kang will arrive in Tokyo on Tuesday to discuss bilateral relations and security issues with Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, said ROK's Foreign Ministry.

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea's growing nuclear threat is expected to be a key issue, with analysts stressing the importance of the two countries - both security allies of the United States - presenting a united front and exerting more pressure on Pyongyang.

But there is also rising concern that the lingering issue of Korean women being forced into sexual slavery during Japanese rule could undermine the meeting, as the two top diplomats seek to narrow differences over a "final and irreversible" agreement signed on Dec 28, 2015, to end the dispute.

Japan has repeatedly urged the ROK to stick to the deal signed by the previous Park Geun-hye administration, but the new government under President Moon Jae-in has insisted that most Koreans cannot accept the deal. Critics have said it was hastily done without much consideration for surviving victims.

Kang's visit comes a week before a special team under the Foreign Ministry wraps up an investigation into the agreement. The team, set up in July, is set to announce its findings on Dec 28, after which the Moon administration will decide whether to keep, modify or scrap the deal.

Analysts say Kang's visit is timed to pre-empt the announcement, which most expect will recommend a revision.

But Foreign Ministry officials have told local media that the team does not represent the government's stand, and its findings will be only a "suggestion".

Analysts said that the two countries will try to avoid dwelling too much on the comfort women issue, so as to avoid any unpleasantness.

Doctor Go Myong-hyun of The Asian Institute for Policy Studies think tank said it is impossible for the historical issue to "have an easy conclusion".

"What's more immediate for Japan and (South) Korea is to show a united stand towards North Korea. Doctor Kang will be very happy to reaffirm that the two countries are on the same page when it comes to North Korea," he said.

The two foreign ministers are also expected to discuss Tokyo hosting the next trilateral summit with China and the possibility of Moon making a separate visit to Japan.

The Straits Times/ann

Comfort women issue poses potential pitfall

(China Daily 12/20/2017 page11)

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