International

China praises Korean assassin whom Japan calls a ‘criminal’

China praises Korean assassin whom Japan calls a ‘criminal’

November 19, 2013 | 09:25 PM

National Archives of Korea (NAK) president Park Kyong-rok displays press registers of Koreans killed by Japan-mobilised officials during an independent movement in South Korea March 1, 1919, and the Great Kanto Earthquake in Japan on September 1, 1923 in Seoul yesterday. The agency also disclosed 65 registers of nearly 230,000 Korean workers forcibly drafted by imperialist Japan during the Japanese colonial era from 1910 to 1945.

AFP/Seoul/Beijing/Tokyo

China and South Korea are to co-operate on a memorial to a Korean national hero who assassinated a Japanese official a century ago, provoking a diplomatic row yesterday.

Relationships between all three neighbours are heavily coloured by history, while both Beijing and Seoul are embroiled in separate territorial rows with Tokyo over disputed islands.

The latest flashpoint between them is Ahn Jung-Geun, who shot and killed Hirobumi Ito, then Japan’s top official in Korea, at the railway station in Harbin in northeast China in 1909.

Ahn, a Korean nationalist, killed Ito in response to Japan’s colonial designs over the Korean peninsula where its influence had been growing.

He was hanged the following year, when Korea also formally became a Japanese colony, heralding a brutal occupation that lasted until the end of World War II in 1945.  Japan already held territory in mainland China at the time and went on to invade Manchuria in the 1930s before occupying most of eastern China during the war.

South Korean President Park Geun-Hye met China’s top foreign policy official Yang Jiechi in Seoul. Both said work was progressing on a monument to Ahn in Harbin, according to a statement by the presidential Blue House in Seoul.

“Ahn Jung-Geun is a very famous anti-Japanese fighter in history,” Beijing’s foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said yesterday. “He is respected by the Chinese people as well.”

“China will in accordance with relevant regulations on memorial facilities involving foreigners make a study to push forward relevant work.”

Ito, Japan’s first prime minister, was one of the most significant figures in the country’s modern politics and Tokyo vehemently opposes the monument.

“We have been telling the South Korean government that Ahn Jung-Geun was a criminal,” Japan’s chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga said yesterday. “I’m afraid this is not good for relations between Japan and South Korea.”

South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-Young fired back with a defence of Ahn, who is also a hero in North Korea.

“Martyr Ahn sacrificed his life not for the country’s independence but regional peace as well,” Cho said.

“It is highly regretful to call such a person a criminal. We again strongly urge Japan to face truth in history and repent on its past wrongs.”

Japan’s occupation has left a bitter legacy in China and both Koreas.

Ahn remains a potent symbol. In July fans in Seoul unveiled a giant banner of his image at an East Asia Cup football match between South Korea and Japan.

Another banner read “There is no future for a people that have forgotten history,” a reference to Japan’s perceived reluctance to acknowledge its colonial and militaristic past.

South Korea and China have both refused to hold formal summit meetings with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, seen by both countries as hawkish on the issues of territory and history.

So far, their leaders have only met Abe, who took office in December 2012, at regional summit meetings.

 

 

 

November 19, 2013 | 09:25 PM