South Korean protesters marched alongside the coffin of a 'comfort women' campaigner to the Japanese embassy on Friday in a protest over Japan's use of forced labor in its wartime brothels.
A hearse carried the casket of Kim Bok-dong, who died this week, to the embassy to highlight the plight of "comfort women," a Japanese euphemism for women who were forced into prostitution and sexually abused at Japanese military brothels before and during World War Two.
"Japan must apologize," some of the protesters chanted during the march. "Japan provide formal compensation."
Mourners carried banners thanking Kim, 93, for her devotion to the cause and called on Japan to atone for its actions. Some signs were in the shape of butterflies, a symbol of freedom for suffering women.
The "comfort women" are a contentious issue between the two Asian neighbors which share a bitter history stemming from Japan's 1910-45 colonization of the Korean peninsula.
Japan says the claims have been settled by past agreements and apologies, and that the continued dispute may threaten relations between the two countries.
Kim, who died in hospital after battling cancer, was one of the first victims to come forward in 1992 and became a fixture at weekly protests outside the Japanese embassy.
Kim said she was 14 when she was first sent to a military brothel, and forced to provide sex for Japanese soldiers also in China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.
Lee Yong-soo, a fellow victim who paid her respects despite the cold weather, laid flowers at a bronze statue of a girl erected near the Japanese embassy to represent the women.
Many mourners quietly sobbed and wiped their eyes as organizers aired a video clip in which Kim shouted during a rally that she would raise similar girl statues around the world until Tokyo sincerely apologized.
A group of conservative activists, who argue the "comfort women" issue should be set aside to foster better ties with Japan, appeared at the embassy with South Korean flags.
"How dare they wave our precious national flags? They're the same people as those Japanese politicians who distort history," Lee said as a she sat next to the girl statue.
Articulate and charismatic, Kim was a vocal critic of a 2015 deal in which Tokyo apologized to the victims and provided one billion yen ($9.1 million) to a fund in Seoul to help them.
Kim said the apology was not sincere because some Japanese leaders continued to deny the women were forced to work in brothels.
Moon's government has said it will not seek to renegotiate the 2015 deal. Last year it vowed to shut down the Japan-sponsored fund and pursue a more "victim-oriented" approach.
With Kim's death, only 23 registered South Korean survivors are still alive, underscoring a sense of urgency behind efforts by the women to receive a formal apology and legal compensation from Japan while their voices can still be heard.
(Source: Reuters)