‘Let us not insult Japan’: Duterte defends removal of ‘comfort woman’ statue

PHOTOS: ABS-CBN News
PHOTOS: ABS-CBN News

President Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday defended the removal of a “comfort woman” statue along Roxas Boulevard in Manila.

“Comfort women” was Japan’s euphemism for Asian women who were forced to work in its wartime brothels. Japan has apologized to the women and provided funds to help them.

The comfort woman statue in Roxas Boulevard was removed recently to give way to a drainage improvement project, the public works department said Saturday.

Duterte said the statue can be placed in a private property so as not to insult Japan.

“We can place it somewhere else. If you want to place it in a private property, fine, but do not use — because that issue, in so far as I am concerned, tapos na iyan (that’s over),” he said in a speech in Davao City.

“The Japanese has paid dearly for that. Iyung (The) reparation started many years ago. Huwag na lang natin insultuhin… It is not the policy of government to antagonize other nations,” he added.

(The repatriation started many years ago. Let’s just not insult them.)

Duterte also said bringing up the plight of comfort women repeatedly would bring pain.

Masakit kasi na ulit-ulitin (It’s painful to bring it up over and over again) and you start to imagine how they were treated badly,” he said.

Women’s rights group Gabriela had condemned the unannounced removal of the statue, saying it was a “desecration of Filipino women’s dignity as it casts a foul insult on hundreds of Filipina sex slaves victimized under the Japanese occupation.”

Japan earlier aired its displeasure over the structure to President Rodrigo Duterte.

Duterte had responded by saying that the statue is a symbol of freedom of expression, which relatives of comfort women and living comfort women are entitled to use.

“That is a constitutional right which I cannot stop. It’s prohibitive for me to do that,” he said.

The National Historical Commission of the Philippines on December 8 unveiled the 2-meter-high bronze statue. It followed the erection of similar statues in South Korea, China and Australia.

Some 1,000 Filipinos served as comfort women during the 1941 to 1945 Japanese occupation.



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