As with the comfort women issue, the only evidence that the Korean government has mobilized Japanese people in the prewar Korean region is by word of mouth.
For this reason, the Japanese government makes the expression of forced entrainment inappropriate (2021).
Let's return to the topic of Sado Gold Mine
The remaining primary materials are that the mining company has deposited unpaid money such as retirement allowances for about 1000 Korean workers, and the workers were inland in Japan #MotokoRich #NYTimes #HikaruHida #UNESCO
before the enforcement of the recruitment order (1944/9). The materials deny the forced labor claimed by the Korean government, such as the fact that they are coming, the payment of bonuses and the working conditions that the dormitory fee was free.
The NY Times has also repeatedly misreported the comfort women issue.
However, from a certain time, it stopped advocating the theory of forced entrainment. It was before admitting the false reports of (吉田)Yoshida's story by Asahi Shimbun(Paper). #NewYorkTimes #comfortWomen
The NY Times stopped claiming because it realized that the comfort women were managed by the comfort station employer. In fact, it assumed that the Japanese army was in direct control for 20 years.
Amazing quality paper😵😵😵
(* 7) The photo below is an order sent by the Japanese military to comfort station operators. It says, "Do not recruit women against their will. #NewyorkTimes #sexslaves
Only recruit willing prostitutes." Professor Yoshiaki Yoshimi (a well known communist and with close ties) to North Korea) misrepresented this document as proof that the Japanese military coerced Korean women. Confronted by other scholars, #NewyorkTimes #sexslaves
Mr. Yoshimi admitted to the Japanese media that he was wrong, but he never did so to Western media. The New York Times in its 2007 article used his initial statement as proof that the Japanese military coerced Korean women. #NewyorkTimes #sexslaves
Many scholars have demanded NYT to retract the article, but NYT has refused to do so claiming it wasn't their fault Yoshimi misre presented.
We hope both of MotokoRich and HikariHida to re-enroll in high school and relearn about prewar Korean history. nytimes.com/2022/02/21/wor…