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Filipino women seek Japan's apology for WWII rapes
08-19-2008, 01:19 AM,
#1
Filipino women seek Japan's apology for WWII rapes
Two dozen elderly Filipino women and their supporters protested outside the Japanese Embassy in Manila on Friday demanding a clear-cut apology and compensation from Tokyo for wartime sexual slavery.

Japan has acknowledged its troops forced women into front-line brothels across Asia during World War II, and its leaders have apologized.

But last year, many surviving "comfort women" were outraged when then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said there was no proof the women were coerced.

"The Japanese government should publicly apologize and put in history how the women were abducted and forced to serve in the comfort women system," said Rechilda Extremadura, head of a group called Lila-Pilipina that has documented 174 cases of Filipino women who were forced into wartime brothels. About 100 women remain alive.

"This is a war crime," Extremadura said. "But the Japanese government continues to be deaf."

Virginia Villarma, 79, said she was victimized between 1943 and 1944. "We can never forget what they did to us. Until now, it's been a wound in our chest."

The Japanese Embassy in Manila refused to immediately answer a request for comment and asked that questions be e-mailed.

Tokyo has generally refused to pay damages to individuals for the war, saying the issue was settled between governments in postwar treaties. Japanese courts have rejected a number of lawsuits brought by former sex slaves.
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08-19-2008, 02:06 AM,
#2
RE: Filipino women seek Japan's apology for WWII rapes
Thanks for posting this, Bootie.

These women have been trying to claim damages for about 20 years now and have yet to see justice. Sad to say, quite a few of them have actually passed away already.

Tokyo has generally refused to pay damages to individuals for the war, saying the issue was settled between governments in postwar treaties.

True. However, the real victims of the war never even got a taste of this. It was mostly pocketed by the corrupt postwar government which was made up of either 1. former Japanese collaborators or 2. Commonwealth officials who conveniently fled to other countries during the war.

It's worth noting that Manuel Roxas, the first post-war president installed by the US, was actually a tax collector for the Japanese during the war...... shows you the duplicity of our local ruling elite!
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