Japan to ignore ROK objection to mine listing by UNESCO

In this file photo taken on Nov 22, 2021, Japan's Foreign Affairs Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi attends a press conference with Paraguay's Foreign Affair Minister Esuclides Acevedo Candia (not pictured) in Tokyo. (CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / POOL / AFP)

TOKYO- Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi on Monday said Japan will ignore the Republic  of Korea's objection when deliberating a contentious plan to nominate a gold and silver mine site on Sado Island in Niigata Prefecture for the 2023 UNESCO World Heritage list.

"We are not giving any diplomatic consideration to South Korea. We are comprehensively considering within the government what would be most effective in seeking the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization's World Heritage designation," Hayashi said.

Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi's controversial remarks were made at a lower house of parliament session after the South Korean side said it was "deplorable" that Japan was seeking the listing of the mine by UNESCO, where Korean nationals were forcibly subjected to brutal labor during Japan's 1910-1945 colonization of the Korean Peninsula

The ROK is also known as South Korea.

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Hayashi's controversial remarks were made at a lower house of parliament session after the ROK side said it was "deplorable" that Japan was seeking the listing of the mine by UNESCO, where Korean nationals were forcibly subjected to brutal labor during Japan's 1910-1945 colonization of the Korean Peninsula.

ROK has demanded that Japan's plan for the site to be nominated for the 2023 UNESCO World Heritage list be immediately revoked.

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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, meanwhile, during the same parliamentary session, said, "We place emphasis on issues pertaining to historic understanding. Japan will firmly respond to unjust slanders."

Despite ROK objections, the push towards mine listing reportedly gathered momentum among the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's conservative members.

 "This is a situation that relates to the state's honor. We should nominate the site in fiscal 2021," Policy chief of the LDP, Sanae Takaichi, said of the matter in parliament.

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Last month, the mine was picked as a candidate for submitting a recommendation to UNESCO by Japan's Council for Cultural Affairs.

Niigata Prefecture has claimed the mine has "a history of outstanding mining technology development before and after industrialization and became one of the world's largest producers of gold in the 17th century," local media reported.