The Korea Herald

소아쌤

FM voices regret over Japan's decision to maintain export curbs on S. Korea

By Yonhap

Published : June 3, 2020 - 15:59

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Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha (Yonhap) Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha (Yonhap)

Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha spoke by phone with her Japanese counterpart Wednesday and expressed "deep regret" that Japan keeps export restrictions imposed on South Korea in a row over wartime forced labor, her office said.

Kang's call with Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi came a day after Seoul decided to take the issue to the World Trade Organization (WTO). She expressed "deep regret" that Japan refuses to lift the curbs even after Seoul resolved all issues cited by Japan as reasons for the restrictions, her office said.

Kang also urged Japan to swiftly remove the restrictions.

On Tuesday, South Korea's trade ministry said it will resume the dispute settlement proceedings with the WTO over the export curbs Tokyo imposed last July on three of its key display materials seen as intended at hurting Korea's tech industry.

Bilateral relations between Seoul and Tokyo have remained badly frayed since Japan enforced the export curbs, seen as retaliation against the South Korean Supreme Court's 2018 rulings that ordered Japanese firms to compensate Korean victims of forced labor.

Seoul hit back at Tokyo by filing a complaint to the WTO over the export curbs but suspended the move as the two sides agreed to resolve the row through diplomacy.

Seoul had also requested Tokyo provide its clear stance about the export curbs by the end of last month. Japan has given no response.

Besides the trade row, the two diplomats discussed pending issues of mutual concern, including the coronavirus pandemic, her ministry added.

They took note of recent cooperation between the two governments in helping each other's citizens who had been stranded overseas to fly back home safely, and agreed that such cooperation should continue to that end.
Kang and Motegi also exchanged assessments on the latest situation on North Korea, according to the ministry. (Yonhap)