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日本政府は「商行為として行ったことを否定」しているらしい



強制性否定は悪質
米法学者が安倍発言批判

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 【ワシントン=鎌塚由美】米紙ウォール・ストリート・ジャーナル(十三日付)は、「従軍慰安婦」問題での安倍首相の発言を批判する米法学者の投稿を掲載しました。両教授は、六年前の米国内での慰安婦裁判の判決を引用し、安倍首相の主張は成り立たないと指摘しています。


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 投稿は、ハーバード大学法学部のジェニー・スック教授と、ニューヨーク大学法学部の教授で米外交問題評議会の研究員でもあるノア・フェルドマン教授の連名によるもの。

 「従軍慰安婦」問題で「強制性を裏付ける証拠はなかった」という安倍首相の発言は、「アジアの古傷を再び開いた」もので、日本軍の関与と強制を認めた河野官房長官(当時)談話から「実質的には、後退」したものであると述べました。

 両教授は、安倍首相はいまだに「実際の拉致は日本軍ではなく民間業者が行ったとの立場を維持している」とし、「言語道断」だと述べています。

 その理由として、六年前に米連邦地裁で争われた「慰安婦」問題の裁判で、被害者の女性から訴えられた日本政府が「商行為として行ったことを否定した」事実を挙げました。同地裁は女性たちが政府の計画にそって拉致されたとし、日本政府の行為は「商行為」というより「戦争犯罪に近い」と結論を下したと両教授は指摘。政府が「商業的事業」をした場合に訴えられるケース以外には訴追できないとする外国主権免責法の規定によって日本政府の責任が問われなかったことを紹介しました。

 その上で、「日本兵による拉致は商行為ではないとの法廷の結論から利益を得ながら、日本政府が今、日本兵は誰も拉致していないと述べるのは、特に悪質だ」と強調しています。

 両氏は、「政治と訴訟は同じものでない」とし、「政治と法廷論争が違うからこそ、日本政府は道義的にも責任を果たすべきだ」と指摘。「ナチの強制労働の被害者と違い、『慰安婦』は補償を受けていない」とのべています。

 両教授はまた、日本の改憲問題に言及し、「日本がなりたいと思う国になろうと決意するのであれば、日本は何よりも自らの過去と向き合わなくてはならない」と指摘。

 日本が過去六十年以上にわたり憲法で平和主義を義務付け、軍事活動を「自衛」のみに制限してきたとし、日本政府が「安全保障においてより積極的な役割を果たす」として憲法改定を検討するという「重大な決定をする」なら、「なぜそういう(平和主義という)条項があったのか、開かれた議論をしなくてはならない」と述べました。





【原文】

http://transnews.exblog.jp/4948907/


Japan's Uncomfortable History by Jeannie Suk and Noah Feldman
Harvard Law School 
An op-ed by Assistant Professor Jeannie Suk: Japan's Uncomfortable History
March 13, 2007


The following op-ed, Japan's Uncomfortable History, co-written by HLS Assistant Professor Jeannie Suk and NYU School of Law Professor Noah Feldman, was published in The Wall Street Journal on March 13, 2007. 


Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has reopened old wounds in Asia with his defense of Japan's participation in sex slavery during World War II. But this is much more than a debate over history. The past is never dead in Asia. To borrow from Faulkner: It's not even past.

Mr. Abe's words are likely to breed further mistrust in neighboring China and South Korea, which have long accused Tokyo of whitewashing history. Moreover, Japan needs to confront its own past as it decides the kind of nation it wants to be. After some 60 years of constitutionally mandated pacifism in which Japan's military activity has been largely limited to "self-defense," Tokyo is considering amending the constitution to play a more assertive security role. But making such a momentous decision requires an open discussion about why that provision is there. When the U.S. amended its constitution to abolish slavery, for example, it had to admit that it had slavery in the first place.

Mr. Abe's position is actually a step back. In 1993, Japan offered an acknowledgment of complicity and an apology to so-called "comfort women" from various parts of Asia who were forced into brothels to be raped by Japanese soldiers. Now, in a change of course, Mr. Abe maintains that the actual kidnapping was committed not by the Japanese army but by private contractors. One leading lawmaker compared the government's role to the outsourcing of cafeteria services to a private firm. "Where there's demand," he told the AP, "business crops up."

This excuse is shamefully weak. We ordinarily would not consider it especially mitigating if someone charged with a rape-kidnapping acknowledged the rape but explained that he bought the victims from a private vendor rather than abducting them himself. Mr. Abe's implication seems to be that the guilt of the Japanese government is somehow reduced because it was renting the services of the comfort women from private firms -- like a customer buying the services of a prostitute from a pimp. In short, this was business, not personal.

But there is further reason to find Abe's suggestion outrageous. When women who survived the sex-slavery camps sued Japan in federal court six years ago, they alleged that the whole sex slavery scheme functioned as commercial activity. Faced with this charge, Japan denied it had acted as a business. The D.C. district court agreed, holding in effect that the fact that the women were abducted and enslaved pursuant to a Japanese government "master plan" distinguished their case from routine commercial prostitution. The court concluded that this "barbaric" conduct was more like a war crime or a crime against humanity than a commercial venture, and so Japan could not be held liable under the provision of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act that allows governments to be sued when they act like businesses.

It is particularly pernicious that, having benefited from the court's conclusion that abduction by Japanese soldiers was not business, Tokyo would now deny that its soldiers ever abducted anyone at all. If in 2001 Japan had said publicly that the comfort women were bought as part of the commercial flow of supply and demand, the comfort women could have used it to support their claim that the Japanese government was engaged in commercial activity. And if Japan had asserted that it outsourced the filling of its sex camps to private contractors, the court may well have concluded that the whole undertaking was more like a business than a non-commercial wartime atrocity.

Politics and litigation are not the same thing, of course. A well-represented litigant will often fit his account to the structure of the law, and Japan advanced a raft of other legal arguments to quash the suit, several of which were later adopted by the D.C. circuit court of appeals (on different occasions). The comfort women still might not have won their case. But precisely because political and legal arguments differ, Japan should be held morally accountable for the hypocrisy of its bait-and-switch approach even now that the courts have blocked the comfort women's case.

It is also worth keeping in mind that the denial of responsibility is an ongoing harm. Unlike the victims of the Nazi slave labor camps, the comfort women have never received formal reparations. The unofficial compensation scheme set to end this month was no substitute for acknowledgment of responsibility -- which is why many survivors refused to accept money from it.

Mr. Abe apparently started down the path of denial to gain political support for his faltering premiership -- itself a disturbing comment on Japan's continued unwillingness to come to term with its crimes as Germany has. Any such support, unfortunately, is gained only at the expense of surviving victims -- and of anyone who cares about the truth.

Page last updated: Mon, Mar 12, 2007, 23:44:09 EDT