Lies of Comfort Women Statue Inscriptions

 

The inscriptions of similar monuments built by Korean activists in the U.S. write as follows.

 

In memory of the more than 200,000 women and girls who were abducted by the armed forces of the government of Imperial Japan.” (Palisades Park, Public library, Fort Lee, NJ)

The comfort women are from at least thirteen Asian-Pacific countries, principally from Korea.” (Brookhaven, GA)

This dark history was largely hidden for decades until 1990s, when the survivors courageously broke their silence.” (San Francisco, CA)

 

If so many women and girls were abducted by the Imperial Japanese Army, principally from Korea, why is there a photo of the Korean people (taken in 1941), who took to the streets shouting “Banzai, Emperor, Banzai” in celebration of rapid advance of the Imperial Japanese Army in China?

See below:

http://www.howitzer.jp/urinara/site05.html

 

Besides, abduction of so many women and girls principally from Korea is contradictory to the fact that more than 240,000 Korean young people (out of 800,000 applicants) volunteered to become the soldiers of the Imperial Japanese Army, including Park Chun-hee, president of South Korea.

See below:

http://www.howitzer.jp/korea/page03.html#volunteers

 

During the Annexation years, more than 70% of police officers and 80% of municipality lawmakers were comprised of Koreans. How is it possible that you can carry out the forced slavery of 200,000 women and girls without being noticed by those police officers and local lawmakers? The local newspapers describe the fact that Japanese/Korean police officers cracked down kidnappers in the Korean Peninsula. The evidence-based fact greatly contradicts Korean claims.

See below:

http://www.howitzer.jp/korea/page09.html

 

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