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More than 70 years ago, at age 14, Kim Bok-dong was ordered to work by Korea's Japanese occupiers. She was told she was going to a military uniform factory, but ended up at a Japanese military-linked brothel in southern China.
She had to take an average of 15 soldiers per day during the week, and dozens over the weekend. At the end of the day, she would be bleeding and could not even stand because of the pain. She and other girls were closely watched by guards and could not escape.
It was a secret she carried for decades; the man she later married died without ever knowing.
Tens of thousands of women had similar stories to tell, or to hide, after Japan's occupation of much of Asia before and during World War II. Many are no longer living, and those who remain are still waiting for Japan to offer reparations and a more complete apology.
"I'm here today, not because I wanted to but because I had to," Kim, now 87, told an audience of mostly Japanese packed into a community center in Osaka last weekend.
"I came here to ask Japan to settle its past wrongdoing. I hope the Japanese government resolves the problem as soon as possible while we elderly women are still alive."
The issue of Japan's use of Korean, Chinese and Southeast Asian women and girls as sex slaves -- euphemistically called "comfort women" -- continues to alienate Tokyo from its neighbors nearly 70 years after the war's end.
It is a wound that was made fresh late last month when Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto, the co-leader of an emerging nationalistic party, said comfort women had been necessary to maintain military discipline and give respite to battle-weary troops.
His comments drew outrage from South Korea and China, as well as from the U.S. State Department, which called them "outrageous and offensive."
Hashimoto provided no evidence but insisted that Tokyo has been unfairly singled out for its World War II behavior regarding women, saying some other armies at the time had military brothels.
None of them, however, has been accused of the...