Japan Data

“Asahi Shimbun” Coverage of the Comfort Women Issue Through the Years

Politics Society

On August 5, 2014, the Asahi Shimbun ran an article assessing its past coverage of the comfort women issue, admitting many factual errors including the 32-year-old testimony of Yoshida Seiji. What came to light through this article, however, was not so much the truth about comfort women as the mutually skewed debate in both Japan and South Korea, which share a peculiar postwar history.

Timeline of “Comfort Women” Coverage and Historical Issues

1977 Comfort women issue Yoshida Seiji publishes Chosenjin ianfu to Nihonjin: Moto Shimonoseki rōhō dōin buchō no shuki (Korean Comfort Women and the Japanese: A Former Shimonoseki Labor Mobilization Manager’s Memoir).
1982 Media September 2: In the Osaka morning edition, the Asahi Shimbun prints an article on Yoshida’s testimony about hunting for comfort women on Jeju Island. Asahi would go on to publish 16 articles regarding Yoshida’s testimony.
Historical issues

June 26: Major newspapers and television networks report that a reference in a high school history textbook to Japan’s “aggression” into northern China had been rephrased as an “advancement” during the Ministry of Education’s authorization process.

July–August: The textbook problem becomes a diplomatic issue. The Education Ministry announces that no such change had been made, and media outlets admit after further review that the report had been false (caused by an error by a Nippon Television reporter). An “Asian neighbors clause” is added to the textbook authorization standards.

1983 Comfort women issue Yoshida publishes Watashi no sensō sekinin (My Wartime Responsibilities).
1989 Comfort women issue A Korean translation of Watashi no sensō sekinin is published.
1990 Comfort women issue

October: 37 women’s organizations in South Korea issue a statement making six demands to the Japanese government, including an acknowledgment that comfort women were recruited coercively, a formal apology, and compensation.

November: The Korean Council for the Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery by Japan (Chongdaehyop) is established.

Historical issues

October: Germany is reunified.

November: The German-Polish Border Treaty is signed. Until this time, East Germany had neither formally recognized the eastern border with Poland defined in the Yalta Agreement (Oder-Neisse line) nor relinquished the rights of German refugees from the former eastern territories to make territorial claims, but the treaty resolves both issues.

1991 Media

August 11: Asahi, ahead of Korean media, runs an article based on a taped testimony by the first former comfort woman to go public on an anonymous basis.

August 14: The Hokkaidō Shimbun prints an exclusive interview of the woman with her real name included.

August 15: Major Korean newspapers report on the story.

Comfort women issue

August: A former comfort woman comes forward for the first time in South Korea. Japanese and Korean media cover the story, both of which confuse the volunteer corps with comfort women. The Japanese government begins investigations.

October 1991–February 1992: The Korean network MBC airs a television series in which a comfort woman is the protagonist.

December: Former comfort women who went public file a lawsuit against the Japanese government, led by Japanese human rights lawyers; the Japanese Supreme Court rejects the claim in 2004.

1992 Media

January 11: Asahi carries an article titled “Ianjo: Gun kan’yo shimesu shiryō” (Document Indicating Military Involvement in Comfort Stations) in its morning edition.

January 12: Asahi’s editorial, “Rekishi kara me o somukemai” (We Will Not Look Away from History), again confuses the volunteer corps with comfort women. Following these articles, domestic and foreign media report on Yoshida’s testimony, specifying the numbers of individuals who were coercively recruited. But after scholars identify the testimony as being fictitious, domestic media refrain from coverage premised on the testimony from August onward.

July–August: Based on records of the postwar trials of Class B and C war criminals, Asahi reports on the forced recruitment of numerous Dutch women as comfort women in the former Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) during the war.

Comfort women issue

January: Following the articles by Asahi, Korean media report on the issue in unison, confusing the volunteer corps with comfort women.

January 16: Prime Minister Miyazawa Kiichi visits South Korea and apologizes at the bilateral summit.

March–April: Historian Hata Ikuhiko conducts research on Jeju Island and discloses his conclusion that Yoshida’s testimony had been fabricated.

April: The government releases its findings, acknowledging cases of public-sector involvement at comfort facilities across Asia.

Historical issues August: China and South Korea formally establish diplomatic relations.
1993 Comfort women issue August: The “Statement by the Chief Cabinet Secretary Yōhei Kōno” is issued.
1994 Comfort women issue August: Prime Minister Murayama Tomiichi makes a statement toward resolution of the issue.
Historical issues

January: The government of the Netherlands releases documents regarding Dutch comfort women in the former Dutch East Indies.

China begins patriotic education.

1995 Comfort women issue

January: Yoshida Seiji admits in the Shūkan Shinchō magazine that his books are fictional.

July: The Asian Women’s Fund, a private entity, is set up by government initiative.

August: The Murayama Statement is issued on the fiftieth anniversary of the end of World War II.

1996 Comfort women issue January: The UN “Coomaraswamy Report” addendum citing Yoshida’s testimony is submitted.
1997 Comfort women issue January: The Asian Women’s Fund makes compensation to seven Korean women. The individuals are denounced as traitors in South Korea.
1998 Media March: Yoshida Seiji refuses to be interviewed by Asahi. Asahi writes that it “could not verify the authenticity” of his testimony.
Comfort women issue March: In response to a request from Chongdaehyop, South Korea’s Kim Dae-jung administration withdraws support for the seven women who accepted compensation from the Asian Women’s Fund.
2000 Historical issues July: The United States and Germany agree on the establishment of “Remembrance, Responsibility, and the Future,” a foundation for handling lawsuits against German companies.
2001 Comfort women issue January: NHK airs “Towareru senji sei-bōryoku” (Questioning Wartime Sexual Violence,” the second episode of the series Sensō o dō sabaku ka (How to Judge the War). The program becomes controversial in 2005.
Historical issues

A junior high school history textbook by the Japan Society for History Textbook Reform passes government screening.

August: Prime Minister Koizumi Jun’ichirō makes his first visit to Yasukuni Shrine.

2004 Historical issues June: In South Korea, the Roh Moo-hyun administration enacts the Special Law on Sex Trade. (Japan’s Anti-Prostitution Act went into force in 1957.)
2005 Media

January: Asahi takes up the NHK TV program aired in January 2001 under the headline, “NHK ‘ianfu’ bangumi kaihen: Nakagawa Shō, Abe shi ‘naiyō katayori’ zenjitsu, kanbu yobi shiteki” (Alterations to NHK Program on Comfort Women: Nakagawa Shōichi and Abe Shinzō Summon Executives on Day Before Broadcast, Say “Content Is Biased”). Shortly thereafter Matsuo Takeshi, a former executive director-general of broadcasting cited in the article as one of the NHK executives, comes forward and flatly denies its content.

July: Asahi carries an investigative article on the story, but no facts are revealed that negate Matsuo’s claim.

Historical issues

March–April: Anti-Japanese demonstrations spread in China.

August: The Roh Moo-hyun administration enacts a law impeaching and ostracizing descendants of Korean collaborators to the Japanese colonial government.

2006 Historical issues August: Prime Minister Koizumi Jun’ichirō makes his last visit to Yasukuni Shrine.
2007 Comfort women issue

March: The Asian Women’s Fund is dissolved. Prime Minister Abe states that “there was coercion of these women in the broad sense, but not in the narrow sense” and is met by backlash in the West.

July: The US House of Representatives passes a resolution urging the Japanese government to apologize on the issue. Yoshida’s testimony is employed as a source.

2010 Historical issues September: A collision occurs between a Chinese fishing vessel and the Japan Coast Guard near the Senkaku Islands. Anti-Japanese movements escalate in China.
2011 Comfort women issue

August: The Constitutional Court of Korea rules the government’s “omission” regarding the comfort women issue as unconstitutional.

November: Chongdaehyop erects a comfort woman statue in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul.

2012 Historical issues

May: The South Korean Supreme Court rules in favor of individual compensation to Koreans who were forced to perform labor for Japanese firms during the war.

August: Korean President Lee Myung-bak visits Takeshima. He also demands that the emperor of Japan apologize to Korea’s independence activists.

September: The Japanese government decides to nationalize the Senkaku Islands, sparking anti-Japanese protests in China.

2013 Comfort women issue July: A comfort woman statue is erected in Glendale, California, with funding from Korean Americans.
Historical issues

March: Park Geun-Hye takes office as president of South Korea.

June: President Park visits China as a state guest.

2014 Media August 6: Asahi carries a feature assessing past coverage of the issue of so-called military comfort women and admits that its reports on forced recruitment by the military had been erroneous.
Comfort women issue

June: The Japanese government investigates the process by which the Kōno Statement was drafted and decides against revising it.

August: Asahi’s assessment articles prompt heightened demands to revise the Kōno Statement, including from within the Liberal Democratic Party. Chief Cabinet Secretary Suga Yoshihide reconfirms the government’s policy that no revision is needed.

Historical issues

January: A memorial hall for An Jung-geun, the Korean nationalist who assassinated former prime minister of Japan and resident-general of Korea Itō Hirobumi, is opened in Harbin, Heilongjiang, China.

May: A stone monument in honor of the Korean Liberation Army is unveiled in Xian, Shaanxi, China.

July: Chinese President Xi Jinping visits South Korea and remarks to the effect that China and South Korea had joined in a common front in the struggle against Japan.

Related Tags

Abe Shinzō Asahi Shimbun comfort women Miyazawa Kiichi Kono Statement wartime responsibility Yoshida Seiji Jeju Island forced recruitment,war crime

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