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Japan’s Sado gold mine gains Unesco status after Tokyo pledges to exhibit dark WWII history

  • To gain recognition, Japan included new material to ‘explain the severe conditions’ of Korean labourers’ work and remember their hardship

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A mine on Sado Island in May 2022. A network of mines on a Japanese island infamous for using conscripted wartime labour was added to Unesco’s World Heritage register on Saturday. Photo: AFP

The Unesco World Heritage committee on Saturday decided to register Japan’s controversial Sado gold mine as a cultural heritage site after the country agreed to include it in an exhibit of its dark history of abusing Korean labourers during World War II.

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The decision signals an improvement in ties between Tokyo and Seoul.

The mine on an island off the coast of Niigata in northern Japan operated for nearly 400 years and was once the world’s largest gold producer before closing in 1989. It was also linked to Japan’s wartime abuse of Korean labourers.

Committee members, including South Korea, gave unanimous support to the listing at Saturday’s annual meeting in New Delhi, India. They said Japan provided additional information, made all necessary amendments to the plan and consulted South Korea over the mine’s wartime history.

Mannequins inside the Sohdayu mine on Japan’s Sado Island in May 2022. Photo: AFP
Mannequins inside the Sohdayu mine on Japan’s Sado Island in May 2022. Photo: AFP

The Japanese delegate told the meeting that Japan had installed new exhibition material “to explain the severe conditions of [Korean labourers’] work and remember their hardship”.

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Japan acknowledged that Koreans were put to more dangerous tasks in the mine shaft, which caused some to die. Many of them were also given meagre food rations and nearly no days off.

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