South Korea has called on Japan to ban the country’s Rising Sun Flag at Tokyo 2020 after claiming it represents a “militaristic and imperial past.”
The flag is still used in Japanese society but is seen by some overseas as a symbol of their aggression during the Second World War.
Tokyo 2020 organizers have confirmed to insidethegames that they will not be banning the flag.
“The Rising Sun Flag is widely used in Japan; and it is not considered to be a political statement, so it is not viewed as a prohibited item,” a spokesman said.
The Korean Paralympic Committee has also reportedly requested that the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic medals be redesigned as they resemble the Rising Sun.
Japan conquered large parts of Asia during the Second World War, including the entire Korean peninsula, before their surrender in 1945.
“The Japanese know full well that their neighbors regard the Rising Sun Flag as a symbol of Japan’s militaristic and imperial past,” said South Korean Foreign Ministry Spokesman Kim In-chul, according to Korean media. “Japan needs to be more humble about owning up to its historical legacy. The Government will work with related ministries to correct the matter.”
Staff from the Korean Sport and Olympic Committee (KSOC) have reportedly met with Japanese counterparts to lodge an official complaint.
On August 15, South Korean protesters tore up a huge Rising Sun Flag during a rally marking the anniversary of the country’s liberation.
Seo Kyung-duk, a professor at Sungshin Women’s University in South Korea, told The Korea Bizwire that the flag should be treated the same as the Hakenkreuz—the swastika symbol used by Nazi Germany.
The controversy can, however, be seen in the wider context of an ongoing diplomatic dispute between Japan and South Korea.
A goods war has developed between the historical rivals, with both countries restricting the other’s products in a series of retaliatory measures.
The Koreans have also expressed concerns about food from Japan’s Fukushima region being served during Tokyo 2020.
Fukushima was struck by one of the worst natural disasters ever to hit Japan, in 2011, when a devastating earthquake and tsunami caused an accident at a nuclear power plant.
Around 16,000 people lost their lives.
Both Tokyo 2020 and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) have been keen to promote the Games as a tool which could help with the region’s recovery.
Baseball and softball matches will be staged there and Fukushima Prefecture will host the start of the Japanese leg of the Torch Relay.
Produce from Fukushima has been served at official events, including IOC Coordination Commissions, but KSOC have claimed they are worried about contamination.
They have also threatened to review their pre-Tokyo 2020 training camp plans due to fears over “radioactivity.”
Further tension has been felt over the appearance of a disputed territory on the official Tokyo 2020 Torch Relay map.
The map on the official web site for next year’s games includes the Liancourt Rocks, which are governed by South Korea but claimed by Japan.
Last month, Japan’s invite to the South Korea-China-Japan Women’s Curling Competition, held by the South Koreans in Gangneung, was withdrawn.
South Korea is threatening to review plans to hold a pre-Olympic Games training camp in Japan next year because of concerns relating to radioactivity from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.
The country’s Sports Minister Park Yang-woo told a Parliamentary Committee that the Government will discuss the issue with the KSOC.
“Nothing is more important than safety,” Park told the Committee.
“We will seek consultations with the International Olympic Committee and others to secure our athletes’ safety and ensure that the Tokyo Olympics will be held in a safe environment.”
Earlier this week, at the start of the Tokyo 2020 Chef de Mission Seminar in the Japanese capital, it was revealed that KSOC sent a letter to Japanese organizers to express concern about food from Fukushima set to be served during the Olympics.
Fukushima was struck by one of the worst natural disasters ever to hit Japan when a devastating earthquake and tsunami caused an accident at a nuclear power plant.
Around 16,000 people lost their lives in the tragedy.
Most observers, however, believe South Korea’s threat is linked to deteriorating political relations between the two countries.
South Korea also announced it was ending its intelligence-sharing pact with Japan in a dramatic escalation of the two countries’ trade war.
Earlier this month, Japan dropped South Korea from its list of favored trading partners.
South Korea then dropped Japan from its export “whitelist” 10 days after Tokyo’s decision, and created an entirely new country category exclusively for Japan.
Those moves mean that Japanese and South Korean exporters of “strategic” goods will now have to go through additional screening to sell abroad.
Japan and South Korea have had tense relations since Japan annexed South Korea in 1910 and considered it a part of Japan until 1945.
Fresh tensions emerged last year when the South Korean Supreme Court ordered Japanese companies to compensate Korean laborers forced to work for them during World War II.
The Japanese Government maintains it settled all colonial-era debts in a 1965 pact, and many Japanese companies refused to comply with the court’s order.
“Sports and politics should be separate…it could be a good chance for Korean athletes to take part in the Olympics that will be held in our neighbouring country,” Shin Dong-keun of the ruling Democratic Party and a member of the Parliamentary Committee told South Korean agency Yonhap News.
“But it is important to take into account how to deal with safety issues.”
Insidethegames