Priscilla Bartonico shivered as tears welled up in her eyes
while she recalled that afternoon in 1943 when two Japanese
soldiers barged into the family's thatched house in the eastern
province of Leyte and abducted her.
The Japanese soldiers took the then 16-year-old Priscilla to
their garrison, and for the next six months she and dozens of other
local women were brutally and systematically raped.
"For decades, I wanted to just forget that episode of my life
but I could not," said the now 78-year-old grandmother, one of
thousands of former sex slaves to the Japanese, who continue to
seek justice for their ordeal 60 years after the end of World War
II.
Bartonico said that long after the war's end, the agony and
misery still suffered by her and thousands of other sex slaves has
yet to be eased by justice.
"The Japanese government tries to sweep us under the rug and
pretend that we didn't happen," Bartonico said, as she stood in the
rain during a protest in front of the Japanese Embassy in Manila.
"But we are real. We want a public apology and we want
compensation."
According to historians, the sex slaves or "comfort women" of
the Japanese Imperial Army during WWII were taken as part of a
systematic operation that involved the forcible drafting of 100,000
to 250,000 Asian women.
The operation involved the establishment, control and management
of army brothels in all Japanese garrisons in the Chinese mainland,
Korea, the Philippines, Malaysia, the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia)
and the South China Sea islands.
Historians estimate that fewer than 30 percent of the "comfort
women" survived their ordeal. Rechilda Extremadura, executive
director of a non-government organization that supports Filipino
"comfort women," said the first Filipino WWII sex slave that came
out into the open was the late Rosa Henson in 1991.
Henson, who died of a heart attack in 1997, shocked the country
when she went public about her dehumanizing and brutal experience
as a "comfort woman" for Japanese soldiers in the northern province
of Pampanga in April 1943.
"To date, we have documented the cases of 173 'comfort women' in
the Philippines, but 45 of them have died without seeing justice,"
Extremadura said.
Extremadura said the "comfort women" wanted the Japanese
government to come clean and make a full disclosure of its
sex-slavery operations in the war. They are also demanding an
official public apology as well as compensation for the victims and
their families.
Unfortunately, the Japanese legal system was not on the side of
the Filipino "comfort women." On December 25, 2003, the Japanese
Supreme Court dismissed a class suit filed by the Filipino women 10
years earlier.
(China Daily August 29, 2005)