Society A 2000
CNN ASIANOW article described popularity of Japanese culture among younger South Koreans as "unsettling" for older South Koreans who remember the occupation by the Japanese. In South Korea,
collaborators to the
Japanese occupation government, called
chinilpa, are generally recognized as national traitors. The
South Korean National Assembly passed the
special law to redeem pro-Japanese collaborators' property on December 8, 2005, and the law was enacted on December 29, 2005. In 2006, the National Assembly of South Korea formed a Committee for the Inspection of Property of Japan Collaborators. The aim was to reclaim property inappropriately gained by cooperation with the Japanese government during colonialization. The project was expected to satisfy Koreans' demands that property acquired by collaborators under the Japanese colonial authorities be returned. Under such conditions, one who has pro-Japanese sentiment seems to try to hide it. According to an anonymous survey done by the
BBC in March 2010, 64% of South Koreans are actually supportive of Japan. While some South Koreans expressed hope that former Japanese Prime Minister
Yukio Hatoyama would handle Japanese-South Korean relations in a more agreeable fashion than previous conservative administrations, a small group of protesters in Seoul held an anti-Japanese rally on October 8, 2009, prior to his arrival. The protests called for Japanese apologies for World War II incidents and included destruction of a Japanese flag. The former
United States ambassador to South Korea,
Harry B. Harris Jr., who is
of Japanese descent, has been criticized in the South Korean media for having a
moustache, which his detractors say resembles those of the several leaders of the Empire of Japan. A
CNN article written by Joshua Berlinger suggested that given Harris's ancestry, the criticism of his mustache may be due to
racism. In August 2019, Seoul, the capital of South Korea, had planned to install more than 1,000 anti-Japan banners across the city in a move to support the country's ongoing
boycott against Japanese products. The banners featured the word "NO", in Korean, with the red circle of the Japanese flag representing the "O". The banners also contained the phrases "I won't go to Japan" and "I won't buy Japanese products". However, after 50 banners were installed, the city had to reverse course and apologize amid public criticism that the campaign would further strain the relationship between South Korea and Japan.
National relations Yasuhiro Nakasone discontinued visits to
Yasukuni Shrine due to the People's Republic of China's requests in 1986. However, former Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi resumed visits to Yasukuni Shrine on August 13, 2001. He visited the shrine six times as Prime Minister, stating that he was "paying homage to the servicemen who died for defense of Japan." These visits drew strong condemnation and protests from Japan's neighbors, mainly China. As a result, China and South Korea refused to meet with Koizumi, and there were no mutual visits between Chinese and Japanese leaders after October 2001 and between South Korean and Japanese leaders after June 2005. Former
President of South Korea Roh Moo-hyun suspended all summit talks between South Korea and Japan.
Education A large number of anti-Japanese images made by school children from Gyeyang Middle School, many of which depicting acts of violence against Japan, were displayed in
Gyulhyeon station as part of a school art project. A number of the drawings depict the Japanese flag being burned, bombed, and stepped on, in others the Japanese islands are getting bombed and destroyed by a volcano from Korea. One depicts the Japanese anime/manga character
Sailor Moon holding up the South Korean flag with a quote bubble saying roughly "Dokdo is Korean land". According to a survey conducted by Korean Immigrant Workers Human Rights Center in 2006, 34.1% of the primary school students in the
Incheon region answered that "Japanese should be expelled from Korea". This rate was considerably higher compared to answers to the same question regarding
Chinese (8.7%),
Black African (8.7%),
East Asian (5.0%),
Black American (4.3%), and
White American (2.3%) immigrants. ==See also==