Gooks Must Apologize for WWII Sex Slaves

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http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2007/2/9/140036.shtml?s=us

Calif. Rep. Wants Japan to Apologize for WWII Sex Slaves
NewsMax.com Wires Friday, Feb. 9, 2007

WASHINGTON -- Three women who were forced into sexual servitude by Japanese
soldiers in World War Two will testify before a U.S. congressional committee
next week, the author of a resolution calling on Tokyo to apologize for the
practice said on Thursday.

Rep. Michael Honda, a California Democrat who introduced the nonbinding
measure on February 1, told reporters he was confident the resolution would
pass by the end of March.

"There are parties who are going to be lobbying against the resolution also,
but on the whole we're enjoying bipartisan support," said Honda, one of a
handful of U.S. lawmakers of Japanese descent.

Honda's resolution calls on the government of Japan to "formally and
unambiguously apologize for and acknowledge the tragedy that comfort women
endured at the hands of its Imperial Army during World War Two."

"Comfort women" is a Japanese euphemism for the estimated 200,000 women
forced to provide sex for Japan's soldiers at battle-zone brothels during
World War Two.

Honda said the first step toward passage would be the hearing at the
Asia-Pacific subcommittee of the House of Representatives Committee on
Foreign Affairs on February 15.

Witnesses would include experts on the issue and three former comfort women:
Koreans Lee Yong-soo and Kim Koon-ja and Jan Ruff O'Herne, a Dutch-born
woman who now lives in Australia, said Honda's office.

Asked about the timing of debate that could become an irritant in U.S.-Japan
relations ahead of an expected spring visit to Washington by Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, Honda said that time was running out for the elderly
women.

"The urgency is based upon the age of the women who were victims of the
policy. Every year these ladies get older and older and they start to die
off," he said in a conference call with reporters in Washington.

Japan in 1993 acknowledged a state role in the wartime program and Japanese
leaders since 1996 have sent letters of apology to 285 of the women, along
with donated funds collected by the government-administered Asian Women's
Fund.
 
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