Koreans sue controversial shrine

Posted on : 2006-12-08 14:37 KST Modified on : 2019-10-19 20:29 KST

Having failed in gov't suit, family members seek relatives' names removed from Yasukuni

Families of Koreans who died while serving as part of the Japanese military during World War II are planning to sue the group that runs the Yasukuni Shrine, considered a symbol of Japan's war of aggression. The families demanding that memorial tablets of their ancestors and relatives be removed from the shrine.

This is believed to mark the first time Koreans have sued the shrine itself instead of the Japanese government to have family members' memorial tablets removed.

The group "Anti-Yasukuni Joint Action" announced that it is suing on behalf of the 21,000 Koreans memorialized in Yasukuni, and that it plans to file the suit at Tokyo District Court on the anniversary of the March 1 independence campaign of 1919. The group says it is going to announce the move in a press conference on Friday, December 8, the 64th anniversary of the outbreak of the Pacific War.

Families in Japan and Taiwan filed a similar lawsuit with the Osaka District Court in August.

The Korean branch of the anti-Yasukuni group plans to hold an "East Asian Peace Festival" next year for human rights and peace activists from Korea, Taiwan, and Japan in Tokyo next year, and organize a scholarly meeting in New York to make the international community aware of "how Yasukuni is against civilization and peace" before taking its case to the UN Human Rights Commission.

A group of Korean survivors and families of survivors of the Pacific War filed a similar suit against the Japanese government with the Tokyo District Court in 2001 that was rejected in May of this year.

The shrine, located in Tokyo, holds the memorial tablets of several designated 'Class-A' war criminals by an international tribunal following the war.

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