
South Korean court annuls provisional order on book about 'comfort women'
A district court in Seoul issued a provisional order in 2015 regarding the book "Comfort Women of the Empire," published in 2013 by Park Yu-ha, professor emerita at Sejong University.
The court annulled the order on Tuesday.
The order targeted descriptions such as that the relationship between the women and the now-defunct Imperial Japanese military was akin to that of "comrades."
Park was charged with defamation. But last year, a high court acquitted her, saying the book should be viewed as an academic argument and cannot be considered defamation.
Park posted on social media that her book, which had been sold with 34 sections edited out, can now be put back to its original form.

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NHK
16-07-2025
- NHK
South Korean court annuls provisional order on book about 'comfort women'
A court in South Korea has annulled a decade-old provisional order to bar the publishing of a book on those referred to as wartime comfort women, unless some descriptions in it were deleted. A district court in Seoul issued a provisional order in 2015 regarding the book "Comfort Women of the Empire," published in 2013 by Park Yu-ha, professor emerita at Sejong University. The court annulled the order on Tuesday. The order targeted descriptions such as that the relationship between the women and the now-defunct Imperial Japanese military was akin to that of "comrades." Park was charged with defamation. But last year, a high court acquitted her, saying the book should be viewed as an academic argument and cannot be considered defamation. Park posted on social media that her book, which had been sold with 34 sections edited out, can now be put back to its original form.


Japan Times
29-04-2025
- Japan Times
Items of an A-bomb victim who died the day he enlisted to be displayed
The personal belongings of a man who died at age 26 in the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima on the same day he joined the now-defunct Imperial Japanese military will be displayed at a relative's home from Tuesday. Michiko Takagaki, 79, decided to display the belongings of Takayoshi Tatara as this year marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. "We have a responsibility as people who have survived until today," Takagaki said. "I had to do something." At 8 a.m. on Aug. 6, 1945, Tatara enlisted in a regional artillery replacement unit based in the city. Just 15 minutes later, an atomic bomb was dropped some 700 meters away. Tatara went missing in the aftermath of the bombing, but it was learned after the end of the war that he had temporarily sought refuge with severe burns from head to toe. His personal items were delivered to his relatives via the local government. Tatara's wife, 1-year-old daughter, father and older brother, who all had gathered to see him off, are believed to have been killed in the atomic bombing. None of their remains have been found, despite numerous search efforts by relatives. Takagaki, whose late husband, Tomomitsu, was a nephew of Tatara, will showcase Tatara's personal items for the first time at her home in the city of Fuchu, Hiroshima Prefecture, until May 18. The 40 or so items, which include a wristwatch and a notebook that Tatara is believed to have carried at the time, as well as a public notice calling him to the military, will then be donated mainly to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. Takagaki had heard stories about Tatara from her late husband, but she was reluctant to share them with others. "It's not something that I can talk about easily," she said. But as she grew older, Takagaki decided to put Tatara's items on display while she still had the chance. "I wonder what things would've been like if (Tatara) had enlisted a day later," she said. "I hope people pick up his personal items and think about a life that was taken too early."

29-04-2025
Items of A-Bomb Victim Who Died on Day of Enlistment to Be Displayed
Fuchu, Hiroshima Pref., April 29 (Jiji Press)--Personal belongings of a man who died at 26 in the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima on the same day he joined the now-defunct Imperial Japanese military will be displayed at a relative's home from Tuesday. Michiko Takagaki, 79, decided to display the belongings of Takayoshi Tatara as this year marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. "We have a responsibility as people who have survived until today," Takagaki said. "I had to do something." At 8 a.m. on Aug. 6, 1945, Tatara enlisted in a regional artillery replacement unit based in the western Japan city. Just 15 minutes later, an atomic bomb was dropped some 700 meters away. Tatara went missing in the aftermath of the bombing, but it was learned after the end of the war that he had temporarily sought refuge with severe burns from head to toe. His personal items were delivered to his relatives via the local government. Tatara's wife, 1-year-old daughter, father and older brother, who all had gathered to see him off, are believed to have been killed in the atomic bombing. None of their remains have been found, despite numerous search efforts by relatives. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.]