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Legislators Call on Japan to 'Accept Responsibility for Sexual Slavery' During WWII

"Comfort women" forced into prostitution by the Japanese "deserve the dignity of having these crimes acknowledged," Assembly members Gordon Johnson and Connie Wagner say.

 

A senate panel approved a resolution that commemorates the struggles endured by ‘comfort women’ at the hands of the Japanese government during WWII, Bergen County assembly members Connie Wagner and Gordon Johnson said in a statement Monday.

The bill now awaits full approval by the New Jersey senate.

“Some of these women were sold to ‘comfort stations’ as minors, others were deceptively recruited with the promise of employment and financial security, and still others were forcibly kidnapped and sent to ‘work’ for soldiers stationed throughout the Japanese occupied territories,” said Johnson (D-37), who drafted the bill with Wagner. “Although many have long since passed, they still deserve the dignity of having these crimes acknowledged by their perpetrators with the hope that it will never be repeated again.”

The bill also calls upon the Japanese government to “accept historical responsibility for the sexual enslavement of comfort women by the Imperial Japanese military and educate future generations about these crimes,” the pair wrote.

Most of the women – estimated to number as many as 200,000 – came from Korea or China and were interned at military comfort stations where they would be forced to have sex with Japanese soldiers. Other women came from Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Maylasia, the Phillipines, Australia and the Netherlands.

The issue of memorializing the women has been hotly debated in Fort Lee in recent months.

Korean-American groups have been lobbying for a memorial to be constructed honoring women at Abbott Boulevard's Freedom Park. But infighting among various groups over the verbiage and design of the proposed memorial has halted the project.

The decades-old crimes are “too horrific to ignore” and should not be “glossed over” with historical inaccuracies, Wagner (D-38) said.

“Approximately three-quarters of comfort women have died as a direct result of the brutality inflicted on them during their internment,” Wagner said. “Of those who survived, many were left infertile due to sexual violence or sexually transmitted diseases and many are now dying without proper acknowledgment by the Japanese government of the suffering they endured during their forced internment in military comfort stations.” 

Palisades Park and Bergen County currently have dedicated memorials to Comfort Women.

Related Topics: Comfort Women Memorial and Comfort women

Rona

2:26 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Why has this become an issue on such a local level?

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oracle

5:59 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Because the Korean Community is leaning on every politician they can in the area. This is really getting ridiculous, and I hope Johnson and Wagner pull back on their support.

Jack B Goode

2:26 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Foolish idea, Nj politicians getting involved in a dispute between 2 foreign countries,that will result in insulting at least one of them all in a bid to pander for votes.
Stick to NJ issues please.

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William Mays

3:27 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

For once I agree with Jack. Absolutely no one in Bergen County or Fort Lee was affected by this, not exactly the Holocaust here. We can't put up a memorial for every single bad thing that happened during a war. People need to get over it, it was a long time ago. S*** happens.

Ron Koenig

3:27 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Makes me embarrassed to be a Democrat !

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Fort Lee Truth

5:59 pm on Wednesday, June 5, 2013

"We" never took sincere responsibility for the Japanese internment camps, but yet, we are qualified to tell them to accept responsibility for something? Gee, that makes sense.

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Tony Kosova

8:52 am on Thursday, June 6, 2013

In the summer of 1950, at the start of the Korean conflict, the government of Syngman Rhee in South Korea ordered the massive execution of over one hundred thousand civilians simply suspected of being communist sympathizers. His
government also oversaw several massacres, including the Jeju massacre on Jeju island, where South Korea's Truth Commission reported 14,373 victims,

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Pakku Rareman

6:00 pm on Friday, June 7, 2013

Tony, you are talking about 保導連盟事件 (Bodo Yeonmaeng Sageon).
Here is a wiki for it (Eng version): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre
It is known that Korean manipulate wikipedia (Eng) information to hide uncomfortable infomation from wiki so I am now sure how Eng version is accurate.

A Japanese wiki says that a Korean NPO says up to 1.2 million people were killed brutally.

South Korea's extreme anti-Japan educations is said conducted to divert its citizen's attention from their domestic problems like this. It has to be also noted that most Korean people don't know Bodo Yeonmaeng Sageon. S. Korean government desparately hides their domestic problems.

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Pakku Rareman

6:00 pm on Friday, June 7, 2013

>A Japanese wiki says that a Korean NPO says up to 1.2 million people were
>killed brutally.
To be a little fair, don't forget that Korean tend to exaggerate any number. The likely number is 200,000.

Pakku Rareman

6:00 pm on Friday, June 7, 2013

Did I introduce this page?
http://sakura.a.la9.jp/japan/?page_id=1419

The page have a good summary about comfort woman issue in English.
It shows a payment record to a comfort woman. It also shows an example how a Korean comfort woman's testimony have changed over time. Find the advertizements also. There is a photo of women who were recruited. See the photo carefully. Do you think these women were "abducted?" Don't use your 21st sense to see the photo. It may rude to transport people with a truck but it was about 70 years ago when a vehicle was still very expensive. A woman comb another woman's hair on the truck. Can they do that if they were "abducted???"

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Stop the Madness

6:00 pm on Friday, June 7, 2013

Well at least I know who not to vote for when their terms are up. We have more problems to worry about in NJ then to fight another fight that's not ours. It's all about buying votes.

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