Lee criticizes far-right group for insulting comfort women statues

President Lee Jae Myung decried a far-right civic group under investigation for insulting statues representing victims of Japan's wartime sexual slavery on Sunday, February 1, calling them 'beasts that must be isolated' from society. Police have launched an probe into Citizens' Action for the Abolition of the Comfort Women Law and its leader for defaming the deceased, hurling insults, and violating assembly and demonstration laws. The group is accused of hanging insulting banners outside high school campuses in southern Seoul and holding unauthorized rallies near the schools late last year.

President Lee Jae Myung strongly condemned a far-right civic group in a social media post on Sunday, February 1, 2026. The group, Citizens' Action for the Abolition of the Comfort Women Law, and its leader are under police investigation for defaming the deceased, hurling insults, and violating laws related to assembly and demonstrations.

The organization is accused of hanging banners with insulting phrases outside high school campuses in southern Seoul late last year, where statues honoring the victims are erected. The banners read, "Are they keeping a comfort women statue on campus to provide guidance into prostitution?" They also held unauthorized rallies near the schools.

"No Koreans, much less no human being, should be capable of calling victims of wartime sexual slavery -- war crime victims -- prostitutes," Lee said in the post. He highlighted the victims' suffering, noting they were forcibly taken to battlefields, sexually assaulted multiple times daily under constant fear of death, and ultimately massacred. "How can anyone wearing the face of a human be so cruel to their suffering?"

Lee rhetorically questioned how such individuals could muster the "enthusiasm, money and time" for this cruelty, emphasizing that freedom of expression has limits. "Just as my freedom exists, so too does the freedom of others," he stated. "Every community must uphold order, morality and the rule of law. ... Those who harm people like beasts must either be made to live as humans or be isolated (from society)."

This incident reignites debates over Japan's wartime sexual slavery issue, highlighting tensions between free speech and respect for historical victims. The statues, including one near the Japanese Embassy in central Seoul, serve as symbols reminding of the victims' pain.

関連記事

President Lee Jae-myung criticizes far-right group for insulting comfort women statues, with police probe underway.
AIによって生成された画像

President Lee criticizes far-right group for insulting comfort women statues

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

President Lee Jae Myung on Tuesday, January 6, 2026, lambasted a far-right civic group for demanding the removal of statues symbolizing victims of Japan's wartime sexual slavery and insulting them. He called it an 'absurd' case of defamation of the deceased in a post on X, formerly Twitter. Police have launched an investigation into the group's leader.

李在明大統領は4月3日、済州4・3事件の犠牲者を追悼する中で、国家暴力に関与する刑事・民事事件の公訴時効および消滅時効を廃止する政府の方針を改めて表明した。金民錫首相は済州島での式典に出席し、1948年の事件の真相究明と犠牲者の名誉回復を誓った。これらの約束は、蜂起鎮圧から78周年を迎えるにあたってなされた。

AIによるレポート

Gender Equality Minister Won Min-kyong issued South Korea's first official government apology to former sex workers whose rights were violated in brothels around U.S. military bases. The statement was released on the eve of International Women's Day.

South Korea's Interior Minister Yun Ho-jung has announced plans to award a Japanese civic group for its role in recovering the remains of Korean forced laborers killed in a 1942 coal mine disaster in Japan. If realized, this would be the first state decoration given by the South Korean government to a Japanese civic organization since liberation from colonial rule in 1945. A recent bilateral agreement on DNA analysis raises hopes for returning the remains to victims' families.

AIによるレポート

李在明大統領は月曜日、民間人による北朝鮮へのドローン飛行が平壌との間で不必要な軍事的緊張を招いたことに対し、遺憾の意を表明した。先週、検察が昨年9月から1月にかけてドローンを飛行させたとして3人を起訴したことを受け、閣議の中で述べたもの。起訴されたのは30代の大学院生、国家情報院の職員、そして軍人である。

President Lee Jae-myung on Tuesday ordered a thorough investigation into a civilian's drone flights into North Korea—claimed by a graduate student last week—and likened the act to 'starting a war.' He reprimanded the defense minister for surveillance lapses and urged avoiding escalation. South Korea denies Pyongyang's sovereignty violation accusations.

AIによるレポート

The board of the Independence Hall of Korea voted on January 19 to approve a motion demanding the dismissal of its chief amid allegations of financial misconduct. Director Kim Hyoung-suk, who faced a special audit revealing 14 irregularities, denied the accusations, claiming the probe was biased. The ruling Democratic Party has called for his resignation, criticizing his historical views.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否