8/31/2012

hurt

“here she is, all mine, trying her best to give me all she can. How could I ever hurt her? But I didn’t understand then. That I could hurt somebody so badly she would never recover. That a person can, just by living, damage another human being beyond repair.” 
- Haruki Murakami, South of the Border, West of the Sun


inside me




what i draw and paint is not exactly a lovely flower...but often myself, deep inside me. some say like they don't understand what it is, that is pretty natural...because i won't show inside myself anytime to anyone.


 i'm a humanbeing, and i get hurt sometimes


blessed scents ... it was there once






beauty ... just for you

my art book ... ♥

♪♪






unrolled ... ♪♪

... my first scroll
 ♥







korea - japan


this is the full copy of the status on FB of my dearest korean friend, posted yesterday. it was hard for me to decide reposting it considering the situations around lately. but i thought i should do it (i've asked the author to let me).
i'm not judging anything here... all i can say is that i want to face what my respectful friend with deep thought and wisdom thinks for real about those sensitive issues. i want to understand what we japanese are really facing. 

ものすごく迷いましたが…転載します。
正義の審判のためではなく、私たちが直視すべき「今の姿」を受け止めるために。
筆者は韓国人、私の大切な友人であり、尊敬すべき師でもあり、これまで何度も私の迷いを救った恩人であり、その人物が
「戦時中、日本がどれだけの人を殺したか知っているか?数えきれない。日本の教科書は生徒たちに誤った情報を教えている」
と私に語った上でこれらの文章を掲載しているという事実、それと向き合うべく私は苦しみ、心の痛みに耐えています。

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DOKDO IS KOREAN TERRITORY SINCE SIXTH CENTURY
The Republic of Korea regrets that Japan is undermining relations between the two nations by challenging Korean sovereignty of Dokdo, an island that has been Korean territory for fifteen hundred years. Korean title to Dokdo is indisputable, borne out by a wide variety of historical and documentary evidences, including documented cases where the Japanese government itself recognized Korean sovereignty of the island. In spite of these facts, Japan is making a groundless territorial claim to this Korean island. Sadly, Japan’s territorial claim prompts Koreans to recall painful memories of brutal Japanese colonial rule, and to ask themselves whether they can cultivate genuine friendship with their island neighbor. As the following paper will demonstrate, Korean sovereignty over Dokdo is truly beyond question or argument. Japan’s continued challenge against it -sustained only by disregarding or distorting well-established historical facts- only serve to reinforce our suspicion that the public apologies by Japanese leaders and politicians for Japan’s past aggression have been nothing but hollow words and empty gestures.
Part I: Profile of Dokdo
1.Geography and Environment
Dokdo is a Korean island located roughly midway between the Korean Peninsula and the Japanese Archipelago (at 37° 14 ́ 26.8 ̋ N and 131° 52 ́ 10.4 ̋ E). Actually, Dokdo is not a single island, but a group of islands. It consists of two main islands, Dongdo (East Island) and Seodo (West Island), around which 89 smaller rocks are scattered. The area of Dongdo is 73,297m2, and Seodo has an area of 88,639m2. The total land area of Dokdo is 187,453m2.
Dokdo has a unique ecosystem. Producing a small amount of fresh water, its volcanic surfaces, partially covered with thin soil and moss, serve as a habitat for about 70 to 80 species of plants, 22 species of birds, and 37 species of insects. The island’s surrounding waters, where cold and warm ocean currents meet, are also home to a diverse community of marine organisms, including seals and as many as 100 species of fish.
Dokdo had been used for centuries as a temporary anchorage for Korean fishermen, and in 1953, a permanent human settlement was established on this lonely island. In April that same year, a 33-member voluntary Dokdo guards organized by Korean civilians became the first year-round inhabitants of the island. The voluntary Dokdo guards would remain on the island for three and a half years, until the Korean Police assumed official responsibility for the island’s defense in December 1956.
Dokdo carries a great symbolic importance for the Koreans because it constitutes Korea’s easternmost national territory. But, its importance is also material, as it has for centuries provided shelter for Korean fishermen who fish in the central stretches of the East Sea. The island also serves as Korea’s easternmost seismological observation platform and meteorological observation station.
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※ It should be noted that the Koreans have long considered Dokdo to be an associated dependency of Ulleungdo, a Korean island situated 87.4 km to the northwest of Dokdo. Dokdo is readily visible from Ulleungdo in clear weather, and Ulleungdo residents have long sailed to Dokdo to fish in its waters. The 33 members of the voluntary Dokdo guards were all residents of Ulleungdo.
2. Names
Today, the Koreans and the Japanese use the names “Dokdo” and “Takeshima” respectively to refer to the island. But, before these names were adopted, a wide variety names were used to refer to Dokdo in both Korea and Japan.
Dokdo has had several different names throughout Korean history, including Usando, Sambongdo, Gajido and Seokdo. (The suffix “do” means “island” in Korean) However, Usando had been the most commonly used name for the island until the late 19th century, when the names Seokdo and Dokdo gained widespread usage. Seokdo and Dokdo are two different Chinese translations of the same Korean word, Dokseom, meaning “rock island” in the dialect used by the inhabitants of Ulleungdo. (During the Joseon Kingdom, most official documents were written in Chinese characters. When “Dokseom” was translated to Chinese ideographs according to its meaning, it was written as “Seokdo”. When translated into Chinese ideographs according to its pronunciation, it is written as Dokdo.)
Japanese had also previously used a variety of names for the island, such as Matsushima, Riyangkotō and Takeshima. It would not be until 1905 that the Japanese adopted the name of Takeshima for Dokdo. It is, particularly, interesting to note that the Japanese mistakenly used the names Takeshima and Matsushima for Ulleungdo and Dokdo interchangeably until the very beginning of the 20th century. In the 1667 Japanese topographical survey, Onshū Shichō Gōki -(Records on Observation in Oki Province), Dokdo and Ulleungdo were called Matsushima -(Pine Tree Island) and Takeshima -(Bamboo Island), respectively. From that time up until the late 19th century, the Japanese have used the name “Matsushima” to refer to Dokdo. Riyangko, or Ryangko, is the Japanese name for the French whaling ship, “Liancourt,” that had first discovered Dokdo with Western eyes and given rise to the name “Liancourt Rocks,” which historically has enjoyed popular usage in the West. From 1905, the Japanese have referred to Dokdo by the present name of Takeshima, which means “Bamboo Island.” No Japanese source, official or unofficial, has yet come to light that gives a convincing account of how this rocky island came to be called by this name.
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Part II: Korean Sovereignty over Dokdo - Facts and Evidence
1. When Did Dokdo Become a Part of Korean Territory?
Korean title to Dokdo dates back to the 6th century. According to the records of Samguk Sagi -(History of the Three Kingdoms), Korean sovereignty over the island was established with the incorporation of Usanguk -(“guk” means “state”) into the Kingdom of Silla, one of the three ancient kingdoms of Korea, in 512 A.D. Samguk Sagi records that in 512 A.D., Yi Sa-bu, a Silla government official, subjugated the island state on behalf of Silla. The territory of Usanguk comprised the islands of Ulleungdo and Usando -(present-day Dokdo). Historical facts surrounding this event and the establishment of Korean title to Dokdo are further buttressed by medieval Korean records: Sejong Sillok Jiriji -(Geographical Appendix to the Annals of King Sejong) and Sinjeung Dongguk Yeoji Seungnam -(Revised and Augmented Version of the Survey of the National Geography of Korea), published in 1454 and 1531 respectively. Within the two official records marking sovereign limits of the Kingdom of Joseon, Dokdo was clearly marked as belonging to Gangwon Province, one of eight provinces of the medieval Korean kingdom. It is particularly worth noting that Sinjeung Dongguk Yeoji Seungnam appends Paldo Chongdo -(Map of Eight Provinces of Korea) and Gangwondo Jido -(Map of Gangwon Province), both of which mark Ulleungdo and Dokdo as belonging to Korea’s Gangwon Province.
The variety of Korean documentary and cartographical evidence naturally leads to questions to what, if any, kind of materials the Japanese have presented in challenging Korean ownership of Dokdo. The first documented Japanese mention of Dokdo appeared in the mid-17th century. Onshū Shichō Gōki, the 1667 topographical survey, was edited by a local official in the Izumo region, which was then a part of the present-day Shimane Prefecture. It contains the following passage:
“Onshū of Japan (present-day Oki Island) lies in the middle of the northern sea... Not connected to anywhere to the north and east, Matsushima (Dokdo) is located at a distance of two days and one night. From here, located at a distance of one day is Takeshima (Ulleungdo). While no one lives on the two islands, looking at Goryeo (Korea) from this island is the same as looking at Onshū from the Izumo region. Therefore, the northern limit of Japan is this Shū (Onshū or Oki Island).”
The Japanese have adopted the first underlined sentence as written evidence representing their geographical knowledge of Dokdo in the 17th century, and also as evidence that Dokdo was an associated island dependency of Oki Island. However, it is logical to infer from the second underlined sentence that the Japanese at the time clearly did not consider Dokdo to be a part of their territory, since Oki Island was explicitly referred to as the “limit of Japan.”
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2. Ahn Yong-bok’s Activities and Japan’s Confirmation of Korean Sovereignty over Dokdo
In the late 17th century, a quarrel occurred between Korean and Japanese fishermen, creating the circumstances for Korea and Japan to make the first intergovernmental contacts specifically with regard to Dokdo. This event must constitute a central landmark in the history of Dokdo for the simple fact that it resulted in the Japanese government’s first official recognition of Korean sovereignty over Ulleungdo and Dokdo.
Ahn Yong-bok was a Korean fisherman who had sailed to Ulleungdo to engage in fishing and farming. According to the records in Sukjong Sillok -(The Annals of King Sukjong), published in 1728, it was in 1693 that Ahn and other Korean fishermen had become involved in disputes with Japanese fishermen of the Ōtani family. During the dispute, Japanese fishermen forcibly took Ahn and another Korean fisherman to Oki Island. Upon arriving in Japan, Ahn appeared before the Lord of Oki Island to assert Korean ownership of Ulleungdo. Ahn was ultimately repatriated to Korea, and his activities in Japan prompted the feudal Japanese Lord to make an inquiry to the central authority in Edo -(present-day Tokyo) as to Ulleungdo’s sovereign status. In 1696, the Tokugawa Shogunate (then the de facto Japanese government) affirmed that Ulleungdo and its associated feature -Dokdo- belonged to Korea. The Japanese central authority’s affirmation of Korean ownership of Ulleungdo and Dokdo is recorded in official Japanese documents of the Genroku Era (1688-1704).
However, the Japanese government’s recognition of Korean ownership appeared to have failed to guarantee the complete cessation of Japanese fishermen trespassing in to these Korean islands, which subsequently resulted in what is known as “Ahn’s second journey to Japan,” as recorded in Sukjong Sillok.
In 1696, Ahn would sail to Ulleungdo with the aim of stamping out the encroachment by the Japanese nationals. Upon arriving in Ulleungdo, Ahn spotted and rebuked the Japanese fishermen for encroaching upon Korean territory. Ahn even chased after them beyond Dokdo, and ended up going as far as Oki Island. Following his arrival at this Japanese island, Ahn was once again granted an audience by the Lord of Oki Island, and once again protested against the continuing Japanese encroachment upon Korean territory. Ultimately, at the inquiry made by the Lord of Oki Island, the Lord of Hokishū -(present-day Tottori Prefecture of Japan) reaffirmed Korean ownership of Ulleungdo, along with that of Dokdo. Subsequently, diplomatic documents were exchanged in 1699 which recognized Korea’s title to Ulleungdo and Dokdo.
Some Japanese scholars have attempted to discredit evidential value of the 17th century episode by saying that the activities were no more than a fiction, or that Ahn had falsified his activities. Yet, Ahn’s activities are established historical facts recorded in Korean as well as Japanese sources. These Japanese sources include: 朝鮮交通大記 (Chōsen Kōzudaigi), 伯耆民譚記 (Hoki Mintanki), 焦慮雜期 (Shōryo Zatki), 交隣高略 (Kōrin Kōryaku), 竹島考 (Takeshima Kō), and 因府年表 (Inpu Nenpyō).
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3. Korean Sovereignty over Dokdo Reconfirmed: Japanese Documentary Evidence of the Late 19th Century
(1) Chōsenkoku Kōsai Shimatsu Naitansho (A Confidential Inquiry into the Particulars of Foreign Relations of Korea) of 1870
From the 17th century onward, Japan would maintain a policy of seclusion (Sakoku) for around two hundred years. Under this policy, a strict ban was placed upon overseas travel for Japanese nationals. This policy of seclusion would not be lifted until the overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1868. It was within such a context that the Japanese government sought to study the Korean situation. For this purpose, the Japanese government dispatched a team of three Foreign Ministry officials to Korea in 1869. A part of their mission was to obtain a clear picture of developments on the long-forgotten islands of Ulleungdo and Dokdo. The mission was entrusted to them through a Japanese Foreign Ministry Directive entitled Takeshima Matsushima Chōsen Fuzokuni Sōseikōshimatsu (The Particulars of How Takeshima and Matsushima Have Come Under Korea’s Possession). On completing their mission, this study team presented a report, Chōsenkoku Kōsai Shimatsu Naitansho (A Confidential Inquiry into the Particulars of Korea’s Foreign Relations), which stated:
“1. The particulars of how Takeshima (Ulleungdo) and Matsushima (Dokdo) have come under Chōsen’s (Korea’s) possession
Matsushima (Dokdo) in this case is a neighboring island of Takeshima (Ulleungdo). No document has been filed concerning Matsushima so far. There was a case in which Takeshima had been leased from Chōsen for settlement for some time during the Genroku era. At that time, it was still an uninhabited island, as was before. Tall reeds grow from bamboo trees or bamboos, and wild ginseng grows naturally. It is said that there are also marine products of other kinds.”
(2) Dajokan Directive of 1877, A Prima Facie Evidence of Japan’s Recognition of Korean Title to Dokdo In 1877, the Japanese government announced an important administrative measure
that reflected its view of the status of Dokdo. The whole affair had been initiated by an inquiry made by a local government in Japan. On October 16, 1876, the Japanese Naimusho (Ministry of Home Affairs) received an inquiry from its Shimane Prefecture. This inquiry was about whether or not the prefecture should extend its administrative sphere to Takeshima (Ulleungdo) and Matsushima (Dokdo), and whether the islands should be officially included on its map and land register. Since the inquiry involved territorial sovereignty of the nation, the Home Ministry again consulted Dajokan (Council of the State), then Japan’s highest national decision-making organ, the following year. A subsequent note of inquiry presented by the Home Ministry, dated March 17, 1877, states the following:
“A Note of Inquiry about the Compilation of the Land Register and on Takeshima (Ulleungdo) and Another Island (Dokdo) in the Sea of Japan
... although we were told that Japan has nothing to do with (these islands), we hereby consult you as per the enclosed papers, since disposition of territory is a matter of great importance.”
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It is also important to scrutinize the annex to the note enclosed in the Home Ministry memorandum, since it clearly establishes that “another island” mentioned above in the main text was Dokdo. The annex states, following an account of Takeshima (Ulleungdo), “Then, there is an island called Matsushima (Dokdo). Lying along the same route toward Takeshima (Ulleungdo), its circumference is (approximately) 3.270 km and is located (approximately) 314.181 km from Oki Island. Trees or bamboos are rare.” This passage in the annex is an unmistakable indication that “another island” in question was Dokdo. No island in the East Sea other than Dokdo can realistically fit the geographical description of it as referred to in the memorandum and specified in the annex.
Ultimately, after some deliberation, Dajokan conveyed the following official reply, dated March 29, 1877, to the Home Ministry as follows:
“Re: The Cadastre for Takeshima and Another Island in the Sea of Japan as per Home Ministry Inquiry
Knowing that our country has nothing to do [with the islands] as the result of the communication between our old government and that country involved after the entry into the island by Korea in Genroku 5, and having examined the view stated in the inquiry, the following draft directive has been made for deliberation and sanction.
Draft Directive
Re: Note that our country has nothing to do with Takeshima (Ulleungdo) and another island (Dokdo) inquired about.”
As articulated in these governmental correspondences, the Japanese government recognized that Japan had title to neither Ulleungdo nor “another island inquired about,” which was Dokdo.
4. The Rise of Japanese Imperialism and Japan’s Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40 (1905)
(1) Japan’s Bizarre Rationale in Claiming Sovereignty over Dokdo
Another key event in the history of Dokdo would occur on February 22, 1905. On this day, Japan’s Shimane Prefecture issued Notice No. 40, announcing the incorporation of Dokdo into its territory. Japan has long referred to this administrative measure as a central piece of evidence in challenging Korean sovereignty over Dokdo, but the Japanese themselves are split about the Shimane Prefectural Notice. That is, there appear to be two Japanese arguments about what the 1905 measure represented for Japan’s claimed sovereignty of Dokdo. The first is that Japan legitimately incorporated Dokdo into its territory in 1905 and that the island had previously been terra nullius (no man’s land). The second view holds that Dokdo had been Japanese territory since “olden times”, and that the 1905 measure was nothing more than a reconfirmation thereof.
It is interesting to note also that the Japanese government itself has developed a
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bizarre mix of two conflicting rationales in its position toward the legal effect of the 1905 measure. Originally, Tokyo incorporated Dokdo into its territory under the rationale of the acquisition of legal title to terra nullius. In making a cabinet decision of January 28, 1905 to incorporate Dokdo, the Japanese government stated, “no evidence can be found of this uninhabited island being under the possession of any foreign country.” However, the Japanese government would modify its original position by combining the “integral part of Japanese territory since olden times” rationale with the “adding to the territory of Japan” rationale (see Japanese note verbales dated July 13, 1953 and February 10, 1954). The inconsistency in the Tokyo’s position raises a seemingly unanswerable question of how Japan could “add” to its territory an island that had already been its territory since “olden times.” No convincing Japanese account for this bizarre combination of two irreconcilable rationales has yet been given.
In fact, there is plenty of evidence that Dokdo was never terra nullius at the time Shimane Prefecture issued its Notice No. 40, and that this Japanese act itself failed to stand up as a valid act of state in acquiring territorial sovereignty.
First, the Japanese argument that Dokdo was terra nullius at the time of Notice No. 40 is rendered groundless -even contradicting Japan’s own previous position [by the actions of the Japanese government itself]. The Japanese government had already recognized Korean title to Dokdo, in the form of the Dajokan Directive of 1877. In addition, five years before the Japanese act of 1905, the Korean government took a significant step in reaffirming its sovereignty over Ulleungdo and Dokdo. In issuing Imperial Ordinance No. 41, Korea upgraded the administrative level of Ulleungdo to gun (county), establishing that the Ulleung-gun office had jurisdiction over Ulleungdo itself as well as Jukdo (an islet off Ulleungdo) and Seokdo (Dokdo). This measure was taken following the delivery in 1900 of a protest to the Japanese Minister in Seoul against Japanese encroachment upon Ulleungdo. The content of the Imperial Ordinance was also carried in the official gazette at that time, so the Japanese cannot reasonably claim ignorance of any possible Korean territorial right to Dokdo at the time.
Second, as can be inferred from in the above account, Japan made no attempt to notify Korea of its intention to acquire Dokdo, despite sufficient awareness of the possible Korean title to the island. Attention needs to be called here to the historical precedent that was set when the Japanese government gave notification to the consular offices of the United States, France and Germany in Tokyo before incorporating Ogasawara shoto (The Bonin Islands) in 1876. Note how, by contrast, these notification and verification procedures were conspicuously ignored in the case of Dokdo.
It can be pointed out that an exception might be allowed to the prior notice requirement for acquiring a new territory. This exception was made in the very famous case of the Island of Palmas arbitration (1928). In this case, sole arbitrator Max Huber ruled that prior notice was not a requisite for occupation because said island was an inhabited one (with a population of about 750), and where the owner, presuming there to be one, would notice any attempted occupation by another party. However, this significant exception created by Judge Max Huber’s arbitral award could never be applied to the Japanese incorporation of Dokdo in 1905 for the following reason: There are strong indications that, at least by the time the cabinet decision of January 1905 was made, the Japanese had a clear awareness that Dokdo was Korean territory, and indications that Japan in this case had deliberately glossed over the requirement of giving notice of the intention to acquire a new territory. A clue as to why Japan took these anomalous steps can be found when one examines the activities of Nakai Yōsaburo.
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(2) Nakai’s Memorandum, A Testimony to the Underhandedness of the Japanese Incorporation of Dokdo in 1905 Nakai Yōsaburo was a Japanese national who engaged in seal hunting business.
Knowing that Dokdo would be a lucrative sealing site, Nakai submitted a request to the Ministries of Home Affairs, Agriculture-Commerce and Foreign Affairs on September 29, 1904, entitled Riyangotō Ryōdohennyu Narabi Kashisagenegai (A Request for the Incorporation of Dokdo into National Territory and for its Lease), in which he requested that the ministries incorporate Dokdo into Japanese territory and lease him the island. Nakai’s 事業經營槪要 (Jigyō Keiei Gaiyou- A Summary of Business), written in 1911, provides important contextual information pertaining to the situation prior to Japan’s incorporation of Dokdo in 1905. It offers the following description of events:
“Thinking that the island was Korean territory attached to Ulleungdo, I went to the capital
and made many plans, trying to submit a request to Residency-General. But, as suggested by Fishery Bureau Director, Maki Bokushin, I came to question Korea’s ownership of Takeshima, and after diligent investigation into the matter, I finally became convinced that the island belonged to neither party based on the conclusion made by the then Hydrographic Director Admiral Kimotsuki.
Accordingly, I submitted an application stating in detail the commercial reason for its necessity via the Home Ministry to the Home, Foreign and Agriculture-Commerce Ministers, respectively, urging incorporation of the island into Japanese territory and for its lease to me. The Home Ministry authorities cautioned that the gains would be extremely small while the situation would become grave if the acquisition of a barren rock suspected of being Korean territory at this point in time [during the Russo-Japanese War] would greatly rouse the suspicion of various foreign countries that Japan has an ambition to annex Korea. Accordingly, the Home Ministry authorities, saying that it would not be easy, seemed set to reject my petition.
Thinking I could not now be frustrated thus, I immediately rushed to the Foreign Ministry to discuss the matter in detail with the then Political Affairs Bureau Director, Yamazawa Enjiro. He said incorporation was particularly urgent under the present situation and that it was not only advisable but necessary to construct observation posts and install wireless or submarine cables to keep watch on hostile warships. Particularly he said diplomacy is free of such considerations as required in the Home Ministry. In high spirits, he said the application must be speedily forwarded to the Foreign Ministry. Thus this island was finally incorporated into our territory.”
The first and second underlined sentences in the above passage clearly indicate that Japan proceeded to incorporate Dokdo into its territory in spite of its own strong presumption of Korean ownership. The second underlined sentence also points to the fact that Japan had a good reason to cover up its incorporation of Dokdo. That is, it was of Japan’s concern that such a striking act of state would invite external powers’ check on Japan’s supremacy in East Asia.
※ What made the Japanese hypersensitive to any such foreign meddling was apparently the bitter lesson learned from the “Tripartite Intervention”. Japan captured China’s Liaotung Peninsula as spoil of the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895). But Japan had no option but to return the strategically important peninsula back to the Chinese, when three Western powers -Russia, Germany and
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France- required it to do so. Thus it stands to reason that Japan devised such stealthy incorporation of Dokdo in order to avoid repeating the mistake it had made a decade earlier.
Finally, the third underlined sentence confirms that the forcible incorporation of Dokdo into Japanese territory at that particular point was being driven by strategic incentives. As the Foreign Ministry official Yamazawa pointed out, construction of the Dokdo watchtower seemed to carry great urgency to the Japanese Navy facing impending battle with its Russian counterpart. In the summer of 1904, Russia had already decided to dispatch its Baltic Fleet to the Northeast Asian theatre. Ultimately, a Japanese cabinet decision was made to incorporate Dokdo into Japan on January 28, 1905, and the Shimane Prefecture issued Notice No. 40 on February 22, 1905 announcing this administrative measure. The Dokdo watchtower was completed in August, and submarine cables were laid connecting Dokdo with Ulleungdo and Izumokuni of Japan in October 1905. It is also important to note that Dokdo was not the only Korean territory that the Japanese had appropriated for tactical purposes in the war against Russia. In order to monitor Russian fleet movements, Japan built and operated some twenty observation posts in Korea, including those in Jukbyeon, Ulsan, Geomundo, Jejudo and Ulleungdo.
Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40 and Japan’s incorporation of Dokdo were tactical interest-driven covert measures without basis in any standard of international law. As further evidence, one can review a variety of post-Notice No. 40 Japanese materials describing and marking Dokdo as belonging to Korea. These Japanese materials include a series of charts published by the Hydrographic Office of the Japanese Navy Department: Vol. 6 and Vol. 10 of 日本水路誌 (Nihon Suiroshi- Hydrographic Chart of Japan), published in 1911 and 1920 respectively, and 朝鮮沿岸水路誌 (Chōsen Engan Suiroshi- Hydrographic Chart of Korea), published in 1933. Also, in 1930, a renowned Japanese scholar Hibatakke Sekko, in an article carried in a Japanese journal, 歷史地理 (Rekishi Chiri- Historical Geography), stated that “Takeshima and Ulleungdo belong to Gangwon Province of Korea, and they constitute the eastern limit of Korea.”
(3) The First Korean Knowledge of and Response to Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40
In arguing the legitimacy of its incorporation of Dokdo in 1905, Japan asserts that Korea did not expressly protest the Japanese measure. The fact is, however, that Korea could not protest because it did not know about the Japanese act. Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40 was issued secretly, without proper notification: not even the Japanese public itself, let alone foreigners, would have had knowledge about this measure. The notice was not publicized in Shimane’s official gazette, nor was it an external display of state intent, issued as it was in the name of the prefectural governor. Thus, the Japanese incorporation of Dokdo in 1905 had no legal effect whatsoever upon the status of the island as a Korean territory.
The Koreans learned of the Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40 a full year after the actual issuance of the measure. On March 28, 1906, Japanese local officials of Shimane Prefecture, who were visiting Ulleungdo, informed the Korean governor of Ulleung County of Japan’s incorporation of Dokdo. This was reported to the central government in Seoul. On receiving this report, Lee Ji-yong, Minister of Interior, denounced the Japanese measure as being invalid. In addition, Deputy Prime Minister Pak Je-sun
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ordered an investigation of the facts surrounding what the Japanese had done, also condemning the Japanese act. Yet, ultimately, the Korean government would appear to have failed to lodge an official diplomatic protest against the Japanese incorporation of Dokdo into its Shimane Prefecture.
Such a failure must be seen in the context of the prevailing balance of power between Korea and Japan at the time. Since being forced to sign the Korea-Japan Protocol of February 1904, Korea had been under Japanese military administration, enforced by two Japanese divisions and a several thousand-strong military police. In signing a further Korea-Japan Agreement in August 1904, Korea’s diplomatic and financial affairs would come under the control of foreign advisers appointed by Japan. In addition, following the signing of the Treaty of Protectorate in November 1905, Korea was deprived of the right to autonomously conduct diplomatic affairs, and its Foreign Ministry was disbanded. It was thus virtually impossible for Korea to deliver any meaningful diplomatic protest. Still, Korean opposition to the Japanese act was, however, clearly expressed in major Korean newspapers- such as Daehan Maeil Sinbo (May 1, 1906) and Hwang Seong Sinmun (May 9, 1906), both of which declared that the Japanese act was completely invalid.
(4) The Fall of Japanese Imperialism and the Restoration of Korean Sovereignty over Dokdo
After Korea was annexed by Japan in 1910, contention over the status of Dokdo became irrelevant. Then, after the Second World War, Korea was liberated and regained its entire territory, and Japan was obligated by the 1943 Cairo Declaration to renounce all the territories it had “taken by violence and greed.” In the 1945 Potsdam Declaration, the Allied Powers declared: “Japanese sovereignty shall be limited to the Islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, Shikoku, and such minor islands as we determine.” When it surrendered to the Allied Powers in 1945, Japan accepted this Declaration unconditionally. The Allied Powers did not include Dokdo among “such minor islands” whose Japanese sovereignty was to be determined. Instead, in 1946, the Supreme Command for the Allied Powers explicitly separated Dokdo from Japanese territory proper by issuing SCAPIN No. 677, which provides: “Japan is defined to include the four main islands of Japan... excluding (a) Utsuryo (Ulleung) Island, Liancourt Rock (Take Island)....”
However, no mention of Dokdo was made in the final text of the Treaty of Peace with Japan (also known as the San Francisco Peace Treaty), signed in September 1951. Article 2 (a) of the treaty provided as follows: “Japan recognizing the independence of Korea, renounces all right, title and claim to Korea, including the islands of Quelpart, Port Hamilton and Dagalet.”
※ Quelpart, Port Hamilton and Dagalet are names that had been used by Westerners to refer to the Korean islands of Jejudo, Geomundo and Ulleungdo, respectively.
According to the Japanese interpretation, Japan regained its ownership of Dokdo by such omission. The Japanese government argues that the peace treaty did not explicitly include Dokdo among the islands to be returned to Korea. If one follows the Japanese interpretation of the treaty, only three Korean islands would have been returned to Korea. Given the fact that there are more than 3,000 Korean islands, such an
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interpretation is absurd. Clearly, this clause intended to name only three islands from among all the Korean islands for illustrative purposes, rather than resorting to an exhaustive enumeration of the islands to be returned to Korea.
Part III: The Only Conclusion
After Korea was liberated in 1945 from Japanese colonial rule, its long-established title to Dokdo was also restored. And, with the establishment of the Republic of Korea in August 1948, Dokdo was given an address:- 1 Do-dong (village), Nam-myeon (town), Ulleung-gun (county), Gyeongsangbuk-do (province), Republic of Korea. And in March 2000, the island was granted separate administrative status:- San 1-37, Dokdo-ri, Ulleung-eup, Ulleung-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do, Republic of Korea. That same month, Gyeongsangbuk-do assessed the land value of Dokdo at 262,921,000 won (approximately $ 259,444), which roughly equates to 1,453 Won ($1.43) per square meter.
Increased Korean concerns about ecological disruption was also reflected in this easternmost tip of their national territory. As part of an effort to preserve Dokdo’s natural environment and ecosystem, the Korean government designated the island as “Natural Monument No. 336” in 1982, and an “Environmentally Protected Area” in accordance with the “Protection of Cultural Properties Act” in 1999. In 2000, under the “Special Act on the Preservation of the Ecosystem of Dokdo and other Island Groups,” Dokdo was given a “Special Island” designation.
Today Dokdo is no longer a lonely island. The island has residents who live on it all year round. At the moment, 37 Korean police officers and three lighthouse keepers are the residents of San 1-37, Dokdo-ri. It is also amazing to see the once-lonely island becoming an increasingly popular sightseeing attraction. These days, two ferries, operated by two Korean companies, navigate regularly between Ulleungdo and Dokdo. Based in Ulleungdo, these ferries convey Korean tourists to Dokdo and offer them a unique opportunity to explore the easternmost territory of their country. The increased number of visitors to Dokdo has compelled the Korean government to take regulatory measures aimed at preventing ecological disruption and improving safety on the steep rocky terrain of the island. Hence, the maximum number of visitors now allowed to land on Dokdo is limited to 140 per day, and 70 at one time.
Korean sovereignty of Dokdo is beyond question or argument. As enumerated throughout this paper, Korean sovereignty over this island is abundantly documented and supported by historical facts, the rule of international law, and a wide range of official documents issued by both the Korean and Japanese governments. What’s more, Japan itself has confirmed and reconfirmed Korean sovereignty of Dokdo. Yet in spite of these historical facts, Japan has attempted to justify its claim to Dokdo by devising invalid rationales, such as the one based upon Shimane Prefectural Notice No. 40, a measure that was a manifestation of Japan’s imperial ambitions in the Korean Peninsula. Japan’s challenge of Korean sovereignty over Dokdo, most recently issued in the form of the Shimane Prefectural Assembly’s passage of the so-called “Takeshima Day” ordinance on March 16, 2005 amounts to a denial of Korean independence from Japanese colonial rule, and an effective withdrawal of the apologies that Japanese leaders and politicians have made for Japan’s past aggressions and imperialist record.
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Dokdo Facts
* the nearest Japanese island from Dokdo
Location (Coordinates)
Dongdo (East Island)
37° 14 ́ 26.8 ̋ N 131° 52 ́ 10.4 ̋ E
Seodo (West Island)
37° 14 ́ 30.6 ̋ N 131° 51 ́ 54.6 ̋ E
Distance Between
Dokdo - Ulleungdo
87.4 km
Dokdo - Jukbyeon (Gyeongsanbuk-do Province)
216.8 km
Jukbyeon - Ulleungdo
130.3 km
Dokdo - Oki Island *
157.5 km
Dongdo - Seodo
151 m
Land Area
Dokdo
187,453 m2
Dongdo
73,297 m2
Seodo
88,639 m2
Adjoining Insular Features
25,517 m2
Highest Point
Dongdo
98.6 m
Seodo
168.5 m
Circumferences
Dongdo
2.8 km
Seodo
2.6 km
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Japan shows few signs of repenting of atrocities

Japanese leaders have recently shown few signs of repenting of the atrocities the country committed during its colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula between 1910 and 1945. Moreover, Japan reiterated its claim to Korea’s easternmost islets of Dokdo in the East Sea.

It also remains unchanged in its position on the issue of “comfort women,” those who were forced to serve as sex slaves during World War II.

According to historians, up to 200,000 women, mostly Koreans, were coerced into sexual servitude at front-line Japanese military brothels.

Korean politicians and civic groups said Japan has no qualification to become a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council as Tokyo has no sense of shame for what was done decades ago. 

Former Japanese Prime Minister Sinjo Abe Tuesday denied Japan’s forced wartime sexual enslavement of Korean women.

The Liberal Democratic Party, if it wins the next elections, will seek to overhaul statements on the comfort women issue, which were issued by former leaders, including Kiichi Miyajawa, Kono Yohei and Tomiichi Murayama, Abe said. 

In 1993, then Chief Cabinet Secretary Kono apologized for the forced sex slavery. A statement issued by Kono said the Japanese military was directly or indirectly involved in running "comfort stations," and that it coerced women into providing sexual services. One year earlier, Miyajawa issued a similar statement. 

In 1995, then Prime Minister Murayama apologized in a statement for Japan’s occupation of Korea and the ensuing atrocities. 

In a major change of Japanese attitude Monday, Jin Matsubara, chairman of Japan's National Public Safety Commission, called for a revision of the statement that apologized for wartime atrocities. 

In a parliamentary session, he insisted that no direct descriptions have been found of Japan's forced mobilization of sex slaves.

As to Matsubara’s remarks, Cho Tae-young, a spokesman at Korea’s foreign ministry, said, "It is deeply disappointing that key figures of the Japanese government have made remarks denying the forced enslavement of Korean women."

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8/30/2012

a memory of summer



uchiwa...♪

full moon

on the ridge line



'Ah, women. They make the highs higher and the lows more frequent.' - Friedrich Nietzsche

i’ve hurt myself by hurting you


grow up and blow away




'Once a woman has forgiven a man, she must not reheat his sins for breakfast' -  Marlene Dietrich

'All artists are egoccentric. But when it works, sharing our internal world is a chance for deeper connection.'  - Hazel Dooney






you said that i've changed a lot. maybe yes...that means growing up. maybe no...that means you just didn't know about me, or i didn't let you know about me.


loneliness to aloneness



impending chill




who wants beauty and fame ?







birds


i was raised not to complain about anything, even the smallest thing in life, because everything can make life worth living.
...but if i start complaining about weather, it is the sign that i really open up to you.




purple nippon










竜胆

’Some of us think holding on makes us strong; but sometimes it is letting go.’ - Hermann Hesse

summer, nippon

8/29/2012

boredom is a dream bird ...






花鳥



miles away

...feeling pain proves that i am alive as human at least

dear my haters...you can hate me and it might breake me as much as you want. ...i save my energy to learn from you, instead of hating you back.




“We must become so alone, so utterly alone, that we withdraw into our innermost self. It is a way of bitter suffering. But then our solitude is overcome, we are no longer alone, for we find that our innermost self is the spirit, that it is God, the indivisible. And suddenly we find ourselves in the midst of the world, yet undisturbed by its multiplicity, for our innermost soul we know ourselves to be one with all being.”  -  Hermann Hesse