Mitsubishi Materials, Chinese WWII slave workers reach deal

Signs deal in Beijing with three former workers representing the firm’s over 3,000 Chinese victims of forced labour

June 01, 2016 06:04 pm | Updated September 16, 2016 09:43 am IST - TOKYO:

Ma Wenyi (centre), holding a photo of his father who was forced to work during World War II at a mine for Mitsubishi Mining Corp., shouts as he demands to join a press conference in Beijing on Wednesday. Mitsubishi Materials Corp., one of dozens of Japanese companies that used Chinese forced laborers during World War II, reached a settlement with thousands of victims on Wednesday that includes compensation and an apology.

Ma Wenyi (centre), holding a photo of his father who was forced to work during World War II at a mine for Mitsubishi Mining Corp., shouts as he demands to join a press conference in Beijing on Wednesday. Mitsubishi Materials Corp., one of dozens of Japanese companies that used Chinese forced laborers during World War II, reached a settlement with thousands of victims on Wednesday that includes compensation and an apology.

Mitsubishi Materials Corp., one of dozens of Japanese companies that used Chinese forced labourers during World War II, reached a settlement on Wednesday covering thousands of victims that includes compensation and an apology.

The deal was signed in Beijing with three former workers representing the company’s more than 3,000 Chinese victims of forced labour, Mitsubishi Materials said in a statement.

To meet domestic labour shortage

The victims were among about 40,000 Chinese brought to Japan in the early 1940s as forced labourers to make up for a domestic labour shortage. Many died due to violence and malnutrition amid harsh treatment by the Japanese.

Under the settlement, Mitsubishi Materials will pay 1,00,000 yuan ($15,000) to each of the Chinese victims and their families. The victims were forced to work at 10 coal mines operated by Mitsubishi Mining Corp., what Mitsubishi Materials was known as at the time.

Will try to locate them all: Mitsubishi

Mitsubishi Materials said it would try to locate all of the victims. The company’s payments would total 370 million yuan ($56 million) if all of them come forward.

At the signing ceremony in Beijing, the company “expressed its sincere apologies regarding its historical responsibility to the former labourers and the apologies were accepted by the three former labourers,” the company’s statement said.

‘Will construct memorials’

Mitsubishi Materials also said it would construct memorials at the sites where the company’s mines were located and organise memorial ceremonies.

The settlement comes two years after several groups representing the victims and their families filed a compensation lawsuit against Mitsubishi Materials. The sides had since negotiated settlements, though one of the groups, representing 37 plaintiffs, has rejected the settlement, according to Japan’s Kyodo News agency.

Japan’s government has long insisted that all wartime compensation issues were settled under the post-war peace treaties, and that China waived its right to pursue compensation under the 1972 treaty with Japan that established diplomatic relations between Beijing and Tokyo. Lawsuits filed in Japan by Chinese and Korean victims of Japanese wartime aggression, including former forced labourers and sex slaves, had previously been rejected.

Foreign Ministry’s acknowledgement

Japan’s Foreign Ministry acknowledged the country’s wartime use of Chinese forced labourers after wartime documents were found in the early 1990s.

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