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South Korean leader offers olive branch to Japan on liberation day

President Moon Jae-in made his comments 75 years after Japan’s defeat was sealed.

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South Korean President Moon Jae-in, centre, gives three cheers during the celebration of 75th anniversary of the Liberation Day at Dongdaemun Design Plaza in Seoul (Chung Sung-jun/AP)

South Korean President Moon Jae-in has offered talks with Japan to resolve a bitter feud over wartime grievances as the nation celebrated the 75th anniversary of its liberation from Japanese colonial rule at the end of the Second World War.

In a nationally televised speech, Mr Moon said that his government has “left the door of consultations wide open” for Japan to settle a long legal and diplomatic dispute over compensation for Koreans who had been subjected to forced labour at mines, factories and other sites.

Relations between the two countries sank to their lowest point in decades last year as they allowed their disagreements over wartime history to spill over into issues related to trade and military cooperation.

Mr Moon, who tempered his words, avoided direct criticism of the conservative Japanese government of prime minister Shinzo Abe, which has insisted that all compensation issues were settled when the two countries normalised relations under a 1965 treaty.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in (Chung Sun-jun/AP)
South Korean President Moon Jae-in (Chung Sun-jun/AP)

Japan’s stance was refuted by South Korea’s Supreme Court in 2018, when it ruled that the deal did not cover individual rights to seek reparations and called on Japanese companies to compensate ageing Korean plaintiffs who had been forced into slave labour.

“Our government is ready to sit face-to-face with the Japanese government at any time” to find a mutual solution the victims can support, Mr Moon said.

He said the process would help build a “bridge of friendship and future cooperation” between the countries.

Tokyo did not immediately respond to Mr Moon’s comments.

In a move Seoul saw as retaliation for the court ruling, Japan last year tightened export restrictions on certain high-tech materials used by major South Korean companies to produce semiconductors and smartphone displays, key exports for South Korea. South Korea has proceed with a complaint to the World Trade Organisation.

Mr Moon also called for North Korea to respond to South Korean proposals for bilateral cooperation, including joint programmes against Covid-19 and other diseases, and the resumption of temporary reunions between ageing relatives separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.

North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency in a statement urged Japan to make a “sincere apology and reparation” to Korean victims of forced labour and military sexual slavery.

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