World War II might seem like a distant memory to many of those still living that are old enough to have lived through that difficult timehttps://www.canadiensstore.com but for 46 “comfort women”https://www.canadiensstore.com the memories of their experiences are still fresh. During WWIIhttps://www.canadiensstore.com more than 200https://www.canadiensstore.com000 womenhttps://www.canadiensstore.com many of whom were Koreanhttps://www.canadiensstore.com were forced to work in brothels and were used by Japanese soldiers during wartime. In the years since the end of the warhttps://www.canadiensstore.com Japan and South Korea came to an agreement on how to reconcile the ordeal these women went through.
The agreementhttps://www.canadiensstore.com penned in 2015https://www.canadiensstore.com included provisions that stated that Japan would provide $1 billion yen that would go toward care for the now-elderly women. There was also to be an apology issued by Japan’s Prime Ministerhttps://www.canadiensstore.com taking full responsibility. South Korea would remove a statue memorializing the “comfort women” that had been erected outside the Japanese embassy in Soeulhttps://www.canadiensstore.com and South Korea would consider the matter settled if these terms were met. This past Decemberhttps://www.canadiensstore.com South Korea’s new foreign minister and Japan’s foreign minister met to discuss this issue.
Although Japan and South Korea remain united on the looming threat of North Korea’s push for nuclear dominance over …