Settings

ⓕ font-size

  • -2
  • -1
  • 0
  • +1
  • +2

Supreme Court orders Mitsubishi to compensate Korean victims of wartime forced labor

  • Facebook share button
  • Twitter share button
  • Kakao share button
  • Mail share button
  • Link share button
Kim Sung-ju, a forced laborer at the Korean Women's Volunteer Labor Corps during World War II, speaks to journalists in front of the Supreme Court in Seocho-gu, Seoul, Thursday. The country's top court ruled in favor of her and other victims from the camp, ordering Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to compensate them. Yonhap
Kim Sung-ju, a forced laborer at the Korean Women's Volunteer Labor Corps during World War II, speaks to journalists in front of the Supreme Court in Seocho-gu, Seoul, Thursday. The country's top court ruled in favor of her and other victims from the camp, ordering Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to compensate them. Yonhap

South Korea's Supreme Court confirmed two appellate court rulings on Thursday that ordered a Japanese company to compensate Koreans for forced labor during World War II.

The four-judge bench handed down the decisions on two damages suits against Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd.

It upheld two rulings ― one that ordered Mitsubishi to award 100-120 million won (US$89,000-109,000) each to five women, including 87-year-old Yang Geum-duk and a victim's family member, and the other that ordered the company to pay 80 million won each to six other forced labor victims.

After the Supreme Court's decision on Thursday, Park Jae-hoon, next to Kim, holds a photo of his late father Park Chang-hwan, another victim of Japan's forced labor during World War II. Yonhap
After the Supreme Court's decision on Thursday, Park Jae-hoon, next to Kim, holds a photo of his late father Park Chang-hwan, another victim of Japan's forced labor during World War II. Yonhap

The rulings come about a month after the top court upheld a 2013 appellate ruling that ordered Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. to pay each Korean plaintiff 100 million won in compensation. The Oct. 30 ruling further soured the frayed ties between Seoul and Tokyo.

The top court agreed with last month's decision that the 1965 treaty signed between South Korea and Japan to settle colonial-era issues does not terminate individuals' rights to claim damages.

The female victims and family filed the damages suit in 2012 for working without pay at a Mitsubishi aircraft plant in Nagoya in 1944.

They claim they were tricked by their school headmaster into believing that they would earn lots of money if they enlist in the Korean Women's Volunteer Labor Corps.

Kim and family members and other victims of Japan's forced labor during World War II march toward the Supreme Court before its ruling on Thursday. The banner reads, 'Mitsubishi Heavy Industries must apologize to and compensate the forced labor victims!' Yonhap
Kim and family members and other victims of Japan's forced labor during World War II march toward the Supreme Court before its ruling on Thursday. The banner reads, 'Mitsubishi Heavy Industries must apologize to and compensate the forced labor victims!' Yonhap

They had sued the Japanese company in Japan, but the highest court ruled in favor of Mitsubishi in 2008. They lodged a suit in Korea, winning the appeal in 2015 that ordered Mitsubishi to pay a total of 562 million won, around 100 million won each.

The six other victims, including a 72-year-old surnamed Park, filed for damages against Mitsubishi for toiling without pay at Mitsubishi's Hiroshima munitions and shipbuilding plant in 1944.

Korea was under Japan's brutal colonial rule from 1910-45. South Korea says Japanese leaders do not sincerely repent for the past wrongdoings and refuse to take full legal responsibility. Japan claims all reparation issues have been settled in the 1965 treaty that normalized their diplomatic ties. (Yonhap)




X
CLOSE

Top 10 Stories

go top LETTER