The Korean victim of WWII sex slavery, which struggles to apologize to Japan, died
Gil Won-Ok, thousands of women died in his home this week, this week’s house was killed this week, one of the Turks in the World War II soldiers, the end was 96 years old.
Ms. Gil’s house, in the west of Seoul, was approved by the South Korean government on Sunday. The cause of his death was not disclosed. Authorities said that in recent years, Ms. Gilin, in general, other diseases and other diseases.
According to his last days, Ms. Clay, to take legal responsibility for legal responsibility for sexual slavery, accusing victims to victims as “comfortable women”, briefed Japan severely criticized Japan. He died with an immortal demand, but he said he would continue after the death of justice campaign.
Despite the stigma, about 240 Korean women, the governments came to express their painful past as their painful past because they would adopt their governments in early 1990s. Now only the seventh of them – an average of 95 years old – is still alive.
“They think they think that the last time he dies.” Ms. Clay said in 2013, “he said. It will not end with our death.”
Women who have compulsory sexual slavery in South Korea have been widely accepted as the colonial power of Japan in 191010-1945 and Korea’s colonial authority and historical justice. The parade of politicians and high civil servants took part in Tuesday sent funeral service or wreaths for Mrs. clay and made statements in honor.
“After his life, we saw what the dignity of human dignity said,” he said in a social media post after the chairman of the Milli Majlis Woo Monday.
Ms. Gil was born in 1928 in Hoichon, North Korea northwestern North Korea. Japan then managed Korea as a colony and Korea was still divided into north and south.
He lived in Pyongyang and was 13 when he was hired for Japanese soldiers in northeast China. Sent home with sexually transmitted diseases after a year. After returning to China in 1942, he was forced to work in a military brothel for Japanese troops to find a job to support his poor family.
After the war, Mrs. Gilar returned to Korea after the end of Japan’s defeat.
Like old comfortable women, he never married and kept the past for a long time. Then he accepted a son and earned money as a street-food seller.
In 1991, South Korea emerged as some of the military authorities, Japanese women The decade has broken silence To talk about their passage during World War II. Historians were mainly mobilized to work in 200,000 women from Korea, every day by several Japanese soldiers.
Ms. Gil decided to move forward in 1998 after watching the protests against the Japanese embassy in Seoul in Seoul. Since then, the weekly protest rally took part in the world and gathered signatures and supporting international conferences and demanded that women traveled in the world for Japan’s colonial past.
Convenience remains a historical argument that has been the most emotionally accused of the most important allies of the United States, South Korea and Japan, the most important allies in East Asia, the United States.
Tokyo says that all allegations of all claims arising from the rule of colonialism in 1965 have been resolved in the reconstruction of diplomatic relations between the two people and women’s complaints are not properly resolved in the contract.
Until South Korea stood behind women in the 1990s, the women of sexual violence were left in silence than the victims of the victims of sexual violence and silently. When young journalists asked about his past, Ms. clay often called the “worst humiliating” experience “woman could hurt the worst.
He said the singer’s love helped him.
“When I was lonely and feel loose in the heart, I always sang myself,” said Mrs. Gil said in 2017, when he left an album in 2017.
Rev., led by Ms. Gil’s funeral service Jeong Seok-Won said that his life in South Korea is appropriate for the assistance of the victim of the aggression that must always move to different places to be ashamed.
“But he decided to expose his pain will not be repeated,” Yonhap for the National News Agency. “Overturned the painful past to lead a big life.”