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Asian News

Japan to Probe WWII Military Brothels

Thursday, March 08, 2007 3:18:31 PM
By KOZO MIZOGUCHI

Former South Korean comfort women who were forced to serve for the Japanese Army as a sexual slave during World War II, shout slogans in an anti-Japan weekly rally in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, Wednesday, March 7, 2007. South Korea's vice foreign minister will visit Tokyo on Sunday for regular strategy talks with his Japanese counterpart, the ministry said Wednesday, amid a row over sexual slaves for Japanese troops in World War II. The Korean read " Disclose the truth and Apology."  (AP Photo/ Lee Jin-man)TOKYO (AP) - Under intense pressure from Asia and the United States, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Thursday that ruling party lawmakers will conduct a fresh investigation into the Japanese military's forced sexual slavery of women during World War II.

Abe triggered outrage in China, North and South Korea and the Philippines last week by saying there was no proof the women were coerced. He said Monday that Japan will not apologize again for the Japanese military's "comfort stations."

Abe also faces pressure from the United States, where the House of Representatives is considering a resolution urging Japan to formally apologize for its wartime brothels. Japanese leaders apologized in 1993 for the government's role, but the apology was not approved by Parliament. Abe said Thursday that he "basically stands by the 1993 apology."


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