SOUTH KOREA’S LEADER BEGS FOR JUSTICE IN SECRET JAPAN SUMMIT. WILL HISTORY’S VICTIMS FINALLY BE AVENGED?
President Lee Jae Myung is flying to Japan next week for a desperate third meeting with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. The official line? “Humanitarian cooperation” on historical issues. The shocking reality? Seoul is literally BEGGING for closure on horrors Japan has tried to bury.
The evidence is in the official photo of this announcement (YONHAP News), showing stern faces that reveal the TRUE tension between these nations.
At the heart of this urgent summit is the Josei undersea coal mine, where 136 Korean laborers were left to die in a flooding accident under Japanese colonial rule. These victims have been forgotten for decades. Now, their ghosts are on the negotiating table.
But why the secrecy? The summit in Nara City will feature “exclusive talks” and a private dinner with “only a few people present.” What deals are being made BEHIND CLOSED DOORS about Korea’s painful past?
Japan’s leader, in power for less than three months, is suddenly hosting this rushed meeting. Officials call it “meaningful” shuttle diplomacy. We call it a DANGEROUS PATTERN of sweeping war crimes under the rug for the sake of “economic issues” and smooth diplomacy.
Tokyo gets to move on. Korean families get empty words and photo-ops.
One question haunts this entire charade: What are they trading away to make the screaming from the past finally stop?
Edited for Kayitsi.com



