Steel worker awarded $87K for forced labor during WWII

The ruling prompted a swift and angry reaction from Tokyo.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told parliament the matter had been “completely and finally” settled by a 1965 treaty normalizing relations between his country and South Korea, something rejected by the court. “This verdict is a decision that is impossible in light of international law,” Abe said.

Foreign Minister Taro Kono summoned South Korean ambassador Lee Su-hoon. However he also told reporters he hoped Seoul would do what was needed to prevent the matter from affecting cooperation between the two U.S. Asian allies trying to rein in North Korea’s nuclear program.

Japanese Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Kotaro Nogami told a news conference that if Seoul did not respond promptly, Tokyo would consider its options, including international arbitration.

Nippon Steel said it would review the “deeply regrettable” verdict before taking any steps. The company merged with Sumitomo Metal Industries in 2012. It had argued it was not responsible for the actions of the wartime steelmaker.

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Image: A Nippon Steel facility in Tokyo, Japan
A Nippon Steel facility in Tokyo, Japan.Issei Kato / Reuters file

Some Seoul officials and experts fear the court’s decision, final and binding, could damage bilateral relations.

If Nippon Steel refuses to compensate, the plaintiffs could request a seizure of the company’s property in South Korea, which may result in an exit of some Japanese businesses, a cut in investment and a flare-up in anti-Japanese sentiment.

South Korea’s foreign ministry, under a previous government, said that a seizure of assets could drive relations into an “irreversible catastrophe.”

“We might have to brace for not only a diplomatic crisis but a pull-out of some Japanese firms and a fall in new investment,” said Shin Beom-chul, a senior fellow at Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul.

Other former laborers and survivors of wartime atrocities, including the comfort women and two atomic bombings in Japan, could also follow suit, activists and analysts said.


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