Court rejects gov't bid to deposit compensation for forced labor victim

General / 이민지 / 2023-07-04 15:18:29
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • kakao
  • naver
  • band
court-forced labor compensation
▲ This March 6, 2023, file photo shows a civic group staging a rally to protest the government's plan to compensate Korean victims of Japan's wartime forced labor through a Seoul-backed public foundation, instead of direct payment from responsible Japanese firms. (Yonhap)

court-forced labor compensation

Court rejects gov't bid to deposit compensation for forced labor victim

SEOUL, July 4 (Yonhap) -- A South Korean court has decided not to accept a government request to deposit compensation for a victim of Japan's wartime forced labor who rejected the government's third-party reimbursement plan that excludes Japanese firms.

The decision, made by a district court in the southwestern city of Gwangju, came after the government on Monday launched a process to deposit compensation for four victims of forced labor under Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.

The victims, who were among 15 plaintiffs who won against Japanese companies in a 2018 Supreme Court ruling, had strongly protested the government plan to compensate them on its own through a government-affiliated foundation.

The court specifically decided against the deposit process for Yang Geum-deok, who has submitted a document to the court expressing her intent to reject the government reimbursement scheme.

Separately, the court returned documents on the deposit process for Lee Chun-sik, another victim, citing insufficient paper work.

The latest decision has led to the view it could hurt the government's third-party compensation plan that was drawn up in efforts to improve long-frayed ties with Japan.

In a statement released Tuesday, the foreign ministry voiced regret over the decision, saying it had undergone thorough legal review of the matter ahead of launching the process and vowed not to accept it.

"We will immediately launch a process for objection and ask for the court's right judgment," the ministry said, also citing procedural flaws in the decision.

The government's third-party reimbursement plan had initially drawn strong protest following its announcement in March, as victims and civic groups demanded Tokyo's apology and direct involvement of the accused Japanese firms. Many plaintiffs, however, later decided to accept it.

(END)

(C) Yonhap News Agency. All Rights Reserved

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • kakao
  • pinterest
  • naver
  • band