WW2-ANNIVERSARY/PHILIPPINES-COMFORT WOMEN Filipino former WW2 sex slaves push fight for justice and compensation to younger generation
Record ID:
144167
WW2-ANNIVERSARY/PHILIPPINES-COMFORT WOMEN Filipino former WW2 sex slaves push fight for justice and compensation to younger generation
- Title: WW2-ANNIVERSARY/PHILIPPINES-COMFORT WOMEN Filipino former WW2 sex slaves push fight for justice and compensation to younger generation
- Date: 13th August 2015
- Summary: MANILA, PHILIPPINES (AUGUST 11, 2015) (REUTERS) FORMER FILIPINO COMFORT WOMEN ESTELITA DY (LEFT) AND HILARIA BUSTAMANTE (RIGHT) WALKING INSIDE LILA PILIPINA RESOURCE CENTER DY AND BUSTAMANTE SCANNING PORTRAITS OF FILIPINO COMFORT WOMAN HANGING ON WALL VARIOUS OF PORTRAITS OF FILIPINO COMFORT WOMEN HANGING ON WALL BUSTAMANTE AND DY WALKING TO TABLE FILLED WITH PHOTOS TABLE FILLED WITH PHOTOS SHOWING PROTESTS BY FILIPINO FORMER COMFORT WOMEN THROUGH THE YEARS CHILDREN AND SUPPORTERS OF FILIPINO COMFORT WOMEN LOOKING OVER PHOTOS PHOTOS ON CARDBOARD BUSTAMANTE GLANCING AT PHOTOS
- Embargoed: 28th August 2015 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Philippines
- Country: Philippines
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA3CFUIKDO1ROMK5IMYQJQAKU9E
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: EDITORS NOTE, PLEASE REFER TO 0078-WW2-ANNIVERSARY/FILE-PART ONE AND 0079-WW2-ANNIVERSARY/FILE-PART TWO SENT ON AUGUST 9 FOR FILE MATERIAL
For decades, Filipino former World War Two sex slaves have been fighting for recognition and compensation for the horrors they endured at the hands of the Japanese Imperial Army.
But their campaign has seen little success and now the few surviving "comfort women" left in the Philippines, are hoping the next generation will continue their fight.
The group called themselves "Pamana", or "Inheritance" in Filipino, consisting of a handful of supporters and descendants of the former Filipino "comfort women", a Japanese euphemism for sex slaves.
Members of the "Pamana" were in charge of spreading information and joining protest actions on behalf of the former Filipino comfort women.
They regularly hold meetings at a run-down resource centre, which was being co-managed by their group and women's rights organisation Lila Pilipina.
Former comfort women Hilaria Bustamante and Estelita Dy act as caretakers of the centre, which holds the records of all documented Filipino sex slaves under the three-year Japanese rule from 1942-1945.
Bustamante, 89, was abducted from her home and raped inside a Japanese garrison when she was 16. She said she suffered psychological trauma growing up and cannot forget the ordeal even today.
"It's not easy to forget what happened. We will bring this memory down to our graves. even if they give an apology, it is still difficult to forget. It is already marked in us," she said.
Bustamante and Dy decided to offer their support in the early 90s, joining various street protests to demand compensation and justice from the Japanese government. They now live inside the centre and teach visitors about the importance of women's rights and the lessons of war.
"We just don't want another war because if there's another war, what happened to us may happen again to the newer generations," said 85-year-old Dy.
Melinda Relos, a member of Pamana whose mother was a former comfort woman, said the centre was facing challenges in funding for upkeep and maintenance.
She said the centre operates solely on grants and donations from non-profit groups, making it difficult to preserve and maintain the documents which were slowly crumbling with age.
Despite the challenges, Relos said members of Pamana like her will not leave the centre nor their advocacy for the former Filipino comfort women.
"Even if there are no longer any grandmothers present, we are still here. There are still surviving children, grandchildren and supporters that can join and continue the fight of our mothers," she said.
Lila Pilipina has records of 174 Filipino comfort women when they started documentation in 1992, but said the total surviving victims could be less than 70 with many of the survivors dead due to old age.
Like their counterparts in China and South Korea, the Filipino former comfort women have been demanding justice through compensation and a public apology from the Japanese government.
Japan acknowledged in 1993 that the state played a role in forcing Korean and Chinese women into military brothels and set up a fund to provide compensation to survivors in 1995. However, Japan has refused to pay direct compensation to survivors.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a former critic of the 1993 statement, now says he will uphold it. Many Japanese conservatives say there is no proof that authorities directly coerced the women. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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