SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife will visit Japan from March 16-17 at Tokyo’s invitation, his office said on Thursday, the first such visit in 12 years after Seoul announced a plan to end a protracted dispute over wartime forced labour.
Yoon will hold a summit meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.
“The visit… will be an important milestone in the improvement and development of relations between South Korea and Japan,” Yoon’s office said in a statement.
South Korea said on Monday that its companies would compensate victims of forced labour under Japan’s colonial rule from 1910-1945, seeking to end a dispute that has undercut U.S.-led efforts to present a unified front against China and North Korea.
“South Korea is an important neighbour with which we should cooperate in addressing various issues in the international community,” Japan Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said at a briefing.
“I hope that through this visit to Japan, Japan-Korea relations will further develop based on the friendly and cooperative relations that have existed since the normalization of diplomatic relations.”
Washington had pressed its allies in both countries to reconcile and called the latest announcements “groundbreaking,” but several of the victims have vowed to reject the compensation, setting the stage for more political and legal battles.
(Reporting by Josh Smith in Seoul and Satoshi Sugiyama in Tokyo; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Kim Coghill)