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Despite Japanese PM's Abe's recent statement expressing grief about World War 2, it wasn't an apology.
Diplomat
Meanwhile, the hundreds of women victimized as "comfort women" during Japan's occupation of many East and Southeast Asian nations have yet to compensated.
Reuters via ABS-CBN
Time is running out as many of them are dying of old age...
Diplomat
Japan PM expresses 'utmost grief' over WW2 but no fresh apology
Fri Aug 14, 2015 12:17pm EDT
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Diplomat
The Abe Statement: Did Abe Apologize?
Abe’s statement included the right language — but not in the right way.
shannon-tiezzi
By Shannon Tiezzi
August 14, 2015
“On the 70th anniversary of the end of the war, we must calmly reflect upon the road to war, the path we have taken since it ended, and the era of the 20th century. We must learn from the lessons of history the wisdom for our future.”
So begins Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s hotly anticipated statement on the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. The official Cabinet statement, delivered on August 14, will be heavily scrutinized, particularly in China and South Korea, for evidence that Abe is attempting to avoid historical responsibility. In particular, outside observers were looking to see that Abe replicated key language from the 1995 Murayama Statement and the 2005 Koizumi Statement: the word “apology” and admissions of Japan’s “aggression” and “colonial rule.” In essence, the question was how Abe would explain what, exactly, Japan did wrong in World War II and the preceding years and how (if at all) he would offer an apology for those actions.
So how did Abe do? Let’s take a look.
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Meanwhile, the hundreds of women victimized as "comfort women" during Japan's occupation of many East and Southeast Asian nations have yet to compensated.
Reuters via ABS-CBN
Former sex slaves demand justice, compensation from Japan
Reuters
Posted at 08/14/2015 4:10 PM
Filipino "comfort woman" survivor Remedios Tecson, 85, takes a break while holding a placard demanding for an apology as well as compensation from Japan, for their treatment of women who were forced to be comfort workers during the war. Photo by Romeo Ranoco, Reuters
MANILA - More than a dozen activists and former Filipino comfort women marked the end of World War Two with a protest outside the Japanese embassy in Manila on Friday.
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Time is running out as many of them are dying of old age...
Diplomat
For South Korea's 'Comfort Women,' Justice in America?
Could the ‘comfort women’ find justice in a U.S. court?
After decades of fruitless campaigning at home and abroad, a group of South Korean women forced into sexual slavery for the Imperial Japanese Army are seeking restitution in a Californian court.
Twelve former “comfort women” were due to file a $24 million civil suit against Japan and a number of Japanese firms on July 1, unless Japan agreed to compensation and an apology, according to Yonhap News Agency.
But, as non-U.S. citizens suing foreign entities, how likely is it that they’ll find satisfactory redress in a U.S. court?
Not very, according to two U.S. experts in international law that spoke to The Diplomat.
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