Asia | East Asian Relations

South Korea has a plan to end its forced-labour feud with Japan

America hopes it will solidify a united front against China

Yang Geum-deok, a South Korean victim of Japan's wartime forced labor, arrives at a rally against the South Korean government's move to improve relations with Japan in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, March 1, 2023. South Korea's president on Wednesday called Japan "a partner that shares the same universal values" and renewed hopes to repair ties frayed over Japan's colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula. The banner reads "South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol's humiliation diplomacy." (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)
Yang Geum-deok wants her apologyImage: AP
|Seoul and Tokyo

Yang Geum-deok, a child of 1940s Korea, dreamed of being a teacher. When her head teacher suggested she should study in Japan, the country’s colonial ruler, she enthusiastically agreed. Aged only 13, she forged the necessary documents and left her home in South Jeolla province. She was promptly dispatched not to the promised school in Japan, but to an aeroplane factory run by Mitsubishi, a Japanese conglomerate. “I was worked almost to death and never paid,” she recalls. Her last hope, she says, is that “the offenders will offer a sincere apology before I die”.

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This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Litigating history”

From the March 11th 2023 edition

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