Chinese citizens file suit against Japanese firms for forced labor
Updated: 2014-02-27 00:45
By ZHOU WA (China Daily)
|
|||||||||
Plaintiffs seek apologies, compensation as they lodge class-action case for first time
Thirty-seven Chinese citizens filed a lawsuit in a Beijing court on Wednesday demanding Japanese apologies and compensation for forced labor during World War II.
It is the first time that Chinese forced laborers and their relatives have lodged such a class-action case in a Chinese court. Observers said the case will increase pressure on Japan to correct its interpretation of its militarist history.
The forced laborers and their relatives want apologies to be carried in mainstream media in China and Japan, as well as compensation from Mitsubishi Materials and Mitsui Mining and Smelting.
Kang Jian, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said the lawsuit is aimed at safeguarding the victims' dignity and human rights.
Dozens of wartime compensation suits have been filed by Chinese and South Korean citizens in Japan, but almost all have been rejected by Japanese courts.
In 1998, five Chinese survivors of World War II and relatives of other Chinese nationals filed seven lawsuits in Japan against Nishimatsu Construction, alleging that the company forcibly brought Chinese individuals to Hiroshima prefecture during the war and used them as forced labor to build the Yasuno power plant.
The allegations were dismissed by Hiroshima District Court in 2002.
Two years later, Hiroshima High Court reversed the district court's decision and ordered Nishimatsu to pay damages to the plaintiffs.
However, in 2007 Nishimatsu filed an appeal with the Japanese Supreme Court.
The top court, in the final verdict, recognized that construction of the power plant by the company subjected Chinese victims to work in conditions that caused them mental and physical pain, but still dismissed the plaintiffs' compensation claim.
"The Japanese court's move hurt us. We can't accept such an attitude toward history," 58-year-old Liu Guolian, daughter of a laborer, told China Daily on Wednesday.
Relatives of deceased Chinese forced laborers, accompanied by lawyer Kang Jian (center, in blue coat), attend Beijing No 1 Intermediate People’s Court on Wednesday to sue two Japanese companies over forced labor during World War II. The lawsuit seeks printed apologies to be carried in Chinese and Japanese newspapers as well as compensation from the Japanese companies. WANG JING / CHINA DAILY |
- Airline receives its first Boeing 777-300
- Beaming with pride
- US expels Venezuelan diplomats
- Pentagon chief plans to reduce US army size
- 2nd Madoff aide testifies, denies knowledge of fraud
- TAO Dance troupe premieres '5' at NYU
- Playing with pandas
- Explosion, gunfire ring out near Bangkok protest site
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Death of panda spurs concerns |
Another one on the way |
Life after glory of victory |
Dongguan bids to clean up its act |
Games bid to boost winter sports |
Sochi Olympics |
Today's Top News
Asiana Airlines fined $500K over SF crash
TPP talks in final stretch
Weibo faces modest growth in '14
Services top US firms' revenue
Health market a big opportunity: report
Memorial days plan drawn up
'Comfort station' to be preserved
US planning full Afghan pullout
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |