Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has angered many in Asia where historians say about 200,000 women were forced into prostitution by Japanese soldiers, claiming last week there was no proof women were coerced.
"We are the living victims and witnesses," said Virginia Villarma, 78. "How can we be prostitutes then when we were so young and innocent? We are telling Abe that what he said was wrong. He is a liar."
The women, some carrying placards saying, "I was raped. PM Abe Liar!" picketed the Japanese Embassy in Makati City along with about 20 relatives and supporters from Lila Pilipina, an organization of wartime sex slaves and women’s rights activists.
Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Franklin Ebdalin urged Tokyo on Monday to adhere to the language and tone of both the 1993 apology made by then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono regarding wartime sexual slavery, and a 2002 letter of apology sent by former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to Filipina "comfort women."
Villarma is one of 120 women still alive among 174 who were documented by Lila Pilipina as Filipino "comfort women," the term used to refer to sex slaves provided to Japanese troops, who invaded the Philippines in 1941.
"Abe is denying the obvious," the group’s executive director Rechilda Extremadura said in a statement. – AP