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A Taiwanese demonstrator holds a placard during a protest rally in Taipei, on August 14, 2013 /AFP

Focus on China

Taiwan activists demand Japan apologise over sex slaves

A Taiwanese demonstrator holds a placard during a protest rally in Taipei, on August 14, 2013 /AFP

A Taiwanese demonstrator holds a placard during a protest rally in Taipei, on August 14, 2013 /AFP

TAIPEI August 14- Around 200 Taiwanese activists protested outside Japan’s de facto embassy in Taipei Wednesday, demanding Tokyo apologise and compensate women forced to work as sex slaves during World War II.

The demonstrators, largely from women’s groups, held portraits of Japanese politicians including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Osaka mayor Toru Hashimoto marked “shameless” and “hypocritical”.

“Justice for all comfort women”, read one placard, while another demanded: “Return my dignity”.

Women’s groups in Taiwan demonstrate against Tokyo every year around the anniversary of Japan’s wartime surrender.

“We urge the Japanese government to sincerely apologise,” said Kang Shu hua, director of the Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation which organised the protest.

“Don’t think they can get away with it after the elderly ‘comfort women’ pass away as we will continue to seek justice for them,” she said.

Historians say up to 200,000 Asian women, mostly from Korea but also from China, Indonesia, the Philippines and Taiwan, were forced to serve as sex slaves in Japanese army brothels during the war.

Over the past 20 years, 58 former Taiwan “comfort women” have died, leaving only six known survivors.

The surviving women, now in their late 80s, were unable to attend the protest due to poor health, the foundation said.

The issue of comfort women and a Japanese apology remains politically charged.

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In a landmark 1993 statement, then chief Japanese government spokesman Yohei Kono apologised to former comfort women and acknowledged Japan’s role in causing their suffering.

But in remarks in 2007 that triggered a region wide uproar, Abe, who also served as prime minister then, said there was no evidence that Japan directly forced women to work as sex slaves.

Hashimoto drew ire earlier this year after suggesting that comfort women served a “necessary” role in keeping soldiers in line during the war.

He insisted Japanese soldiers were not uniquely guilty, claiming systemic trafficking for sexual purposes by armies around the world.

The Japanese Supreme Court in 2005 rejected a compensation claim of 10 million yen (now $100,000) from each of seven Taiwanese women and their demand for an apology.

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