CHINA / National |
Japan courts reject WW2 suits(Reuters)Updated: 2007-04-27 10:04 TOKYO - Japan's top court on Friday rejected two compensation claims by Chinese who suffered at Japanese hands during World War Two, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe tried to soothe anger in Washington over his comments on wartime sex slavery.
Two Chinese women who were kidnapped and forced to provide sex for Japanese soldiers during World War Two lost their Supreme Court appeal for damages. That claim had already been settled under a 1972 Japan-China joint statement, the court said. Their lawyer called on the government nonetheless to provide some form of damages to the surviving of the two women, who is 80 years old. "I hope that the government admits to the truth and takes specific measures
to compensate the victim while she is in good health," said lawyer Sadahiko
Sakaguchi. That claim had also been settled under the 1972 joint statement, the court said. "The ruling is disgraceful in light of friendly relations between Japan and
China," said Shinzo Tsuchiya, a supporter of the former labourers.
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