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Pro-North Koreans lash out at court ruling on de facto embassy

10 Comments

Angry officials at North Korea's de facto embassy in Tokyo lashed out Tuesday at what they said was Japanese judicial discrimination, after a court ruled it must sell the building to developers.

Portraits of the founding father of North Korea, Kim Il-Sung and his successor-son, Kim Jong-Il, loomed over journalists at a rare press conference inside the building in central Tokyo that is officially the headquarters of pro-Pyongyang Koreans who live in Japan.

"The decision by the district court is an act of violence, exposing ethnic discrimination held by the judicial sector against Koreans in Japan," the organization -- Chongryon -- said in a statement. "It is an unbearable act of animosity against our country."

Chongryon was ordered to sell it 2,390-square-meter plot and 10-story building to repay loans dating back to the collapse of Japan's bubble economy at the end of the 1990s.

A series of auctions were organized, with prospective buyers submitting closed offers for the building, which appears to have much of the same furnishing and decoration as it did when it was built in 1986.

But on Monday, the Tokyo District Court said a huge bid from an obscure Mongolia-registered company was not permitted because it appeared to have links to Pyongyang.

Japanese law forbids participation of the seller in the bidding of a forced auction.

The court said real estate firm Marunaka Holdings' runner-up offer of 2.21 billion yen -- nearly 3 billion yen lower than the Mongolian bid -- was legitimate, meaning it should be the owner of the prime Tokyo land.

Chongryon said it had appealed the ruling to a higher court.

Nam Sung-U, vice-chairman of the organization, which acts as an embassy in the absence of diplomatic ties between the two countries, said he had received no instructions from Pyongyang, but did not doubt they would be annoyed.

"The decision to sell the property in such an unprecedented way would not only affect the activities of Chongryon, a rights group for the Koreans in Japan, but also leave serious resentment for the Japan-Korea relationship," he said.

There are around 500,000 ethnic Koreans in Japan, mostly descendants of migrants and forced workers from Tokyo's sometimes brutal 1910-1945 occupation of the Korean peninsula.

Many are effectively stateless, having forfeited their Japanese nationality with Japan's 1945 defeat. They remain without the vote in their host country.

© (c) 2014 AFP

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

10 Comments
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"also leave serious resentment for the Japan-Korea relationship"

As if we have good relationship, ever. So they can't pay rent/mortgage but they don't want to move out either ? Wow, how convenient, I wish I could do the same

10 ( +10 / -0 )

Bravo Japan, thats the spirit, gj. Finally to eliminate that shameful monument of North Korea crazy ideology .

7 ( +8 / -1 )

This "unbearable act of animosity" wouldn't have happened if you had paid your long-overdue loan.

12 ( +12 / -0 )

North Korea is a pariah.

3 ( +5 / -2 )

If they love North Korea so much why don't they just move back there?

12 ( +12 / -0 )

Really don't understand how there are still "pro-Pyongyang" Koreans living in Japan. If they are so pro-Pyongyang, why don't they move back there? Oh because they will be questioned as traitors and probably sent off to work camps. Now why would you want to support a country that would do that to you?

11 ( +11 / -0 )

Love how people live in other country woth their own culture. I jusr dobt understand old people

5 ( +5 / -0 )

They are not only Pro-North but also Pro- South as well that lives under the special resident clause. The sticking point the anti-Korean groups are protesting about.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

Indeed Amidalism.

These people are trying to hide under the 'atrocity' card, just the same as some in other countries like to play the race card as an excuse.

And again, the last sentences make it seem, as per usual, that these 'stateless' Koreans are somehow that way because the Japanese government and society persecutes them that way. It's a favorite argument from the anti Japan crowd.

The truth is, many of these ethnic Koreans refuse to become proper Japanese citizens by CHOICE, not because of racism or hatred.

2 ( +4 / -2 )

“The decision by the district court is an act of violence, exposing ethnic discrimination held by the judicial sector against Koreans in Japan,” the organization—Chongryon—said in a statement. “It is an unbearable act of animosity against our country.”

No. It is the act of a government in recovering land from a deadbeat debtor. Waving the "ethnic discrimination" flag doesn't change the fact that YOU let them get their foot in the door by not meeting your debt obligations. Any animosity is directed at the deadbeat debtor - Chongryon - not a particular country.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

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