Japan shied away from investigating the
“comfort women” issue in Southeast Asia in the early 1990s to stem negative
public attention that was sure to arise from the contentious issue, The Asahi
Shimbun has learned from classified diplomatic papers and interviews with
government officials
That secret refusal came despite a pledge publicly to launch
probes into countries in addition to South Korea.
In 1992 and 1993, the comfort women issue emerged as a
sticking point between Japan and South Korea. In July 1993, the government
conducted a round of interviews with former comfort women in South Korea.
However, according to a confidential diplomatic document
dated July 30, 1993, Foreign Minister Kabun Muto stated the Japanese
government’s policy that it would not conduct interviews with former comfort
women in the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia.
“We want to avoid (interviews) as much as possible also from
the viewpoint that we should ward off a situation in that we only end up
fanning public interest (in the issue) unnecessarily,” Muto said in the
document telegraphed to the Japanese embassies in the three countries.
Comfort women refer to women who were forced to work in
front-line brothels to provide sex to Japanese troops before and during World
War II. Many of them were from the Korean Peninsula, which was a Japanese
colony from 1910 to 1945.
The Asahi Shimbun obtained those diplomatic documents
through the information disclosure law.
The paper in question was produced ahead of Chief Cabinet
Secretary Yohei Kono's landmark acknowledgement of military authorities’
involvement in the management of brothels in a statement released on Aug. 4,
1993. The statement offered apologies to the victims, saying, the comfort women
system “severely injured the honor and dignity of many women.”
At that time, Japan showed a willingness to also conduct a
government study in countries that fell under Japan’s wartime aggression, apart
from South Korea.
At a Diet session, the head of a section at the Cabinet
Secretariat that handles diplomatic issues said that a government study on
comfort women “will not be limited to the Korean Peninsula.”
But the document showed that despite the pledge, the
government behind closed doors was trying to keep the issue from spreading
beyond Korea.
That policy can be seen in a comfort women study it started
in December 1991, when a study team formed under the administration of Prime
Minister Kiichi Miyazawa started collecting relevant documents kept at Japanese
ministries and agencies. Tokyo also interviewed former comfort women in South
Korea in July 1993.
But Japan deliberately steered away from getting to the
bottom of the issue in Southeast Asian nations in its initial report, released
in July 1992, which acknowledged the government and military's involvement in
setting up the comfort women system.
When the Indonesian government issued the same month a
statement protesting that Tokyo’s study on comfort women was insufficient,
Keiichi Hayashi, then director with the Foreign Ministry’s Second Southeast
Asia Division, expressed anger in a document dated July 14, 1992. The paper was
addressed to the Indonesian envoy in Tokyo.
Hayashi, now ambassador to Britain, objected to the
statement, saying that it was tantamount to saying that Japan was not
trustworthy.
He also said that it is impossible for the compensation
issue to be resurrected because the question of war reparations was already
settled between Japan and Indonesia in 1958.
Furthermore, he denounced an Indonesian official for
commenting on the need to punish former Japanese troops when Jakarta released
the statement.
Hayashi said the official’s remark was surprising in light
of the fact that even South Korea did not demand such a step.
A factor behind these moves was the Japanese government’s
attempt to prevent the comfort women issue from sending ripples throughout
Asia.
“We wanted to keep the issue from spilling over to countries
other than South Korea,” said a high-ranking official who handled the issue
under the Miyazawa administration. “Our thinking was that relations with other
countries should not be destabilized by raking over old ashes."
'ONLY SOUTH KOREA'
The comfort women issue was not only between Japan and South
Korea. The victims include women from various parts of Asia, as well as the
Netherlands.
But it gave an impression that it was a political issue
between the two neighbors because Japan intended to settle it by separating
other countries from South Korea, where criticism of Japan mounted.
“It is only South Korea, which harshly called on Japan to
confront the issue,” said Nobuo Ishihara, deputy chief Cabinet secretary, who
oversaw the entire corps of Japanese bureaucrats. “Other countries did not
raise the issue, so we did not have the intention to look into it on our part.”
Ishihara is one of 12 officials who granted an interview to
The Asahi Shimbun. He said that Japan did not conduct interviews in countries
in Southeast Asia because it was questionable that those nations, which have
problems conducting administrative tasks, would not be able to locate true
victims.
“As long as the Japanese government conducts the study,
fairness and accuracy are crucial,” he said.
But a senior Japanese government official recalled that
Tokyo was afraid that an investigation, including interviews of the victims,
would reveal the stark reality that these women had to endure in those
countries invaded by Japan.
The governments of Southeast Asian countries, too, were
reluctant to pursue the issue. With many dependent on aid from Japan, they
chose not to strain ties with Tokyo by pressing it as a political issue.
As a result, former comfort women had little access to
redress. Most of the Indonesian victims are now around 90.
They could not receive “atonement money” from the Asian
Women’s Fund, an entity established by the Japanese government in 1995 to raise
donations from the public and conduct welfare and other programs for the
victims.
It was because the Indonesian government did not want it
that way, according to former Indonesian government officials. Instead, the
fund's welfare program was provided for people not limited to the victims. THE
ASAHI SHIMBUN (This article was written by Jun Sato, Hiroyoshi Itabashi,
Tamiyuki Kihara and Kenji Oda.)
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