Some 200 Japanese nationalists lashed out today at an agreement to settle a dispute with South Korea about wartime sex slaves, with some calling on Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to kill himself in shame.
Japan yesterday offered a "heartfelt apology" and a one-billion yen (USD 8.3 million) payment to surviving South Korean "comfort women" forced into Japanese military brothels during World War II.
Abe, himself a nationalist who came to power three years ago vowing to revitalise Japan's economy and revise its war-renouncing constitution, has praised the agreement as heralding a "new era" for relations.
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Some on Japan's conservative far right have long said the country has nothing to apologise for and have questioned the accounts of the surviving comfort women, suggesting they were prostitutes and not coerced.
Demonstrators, mostly in their 60s or older, sang "Kimigayo," the national anthem which is an ode to Japan's emperor, and carried red and white national flags.
"We will never allow this quislingism," participants at the rally outside the compound housing Abe's official office and residence chanted in unison, calling him a traitor.
"Reverse this disgraceful act," they yelled.
"Abe, you stained the spirit of the war dead!" one woman shouted.
"You must commit seppuku," she added, referring to the traditional act of ritual suicide by disembowelment.
Satoru Mizushima, a rally organiser, told AFP: "The agreement is going to be Japan's worst blemish. Prime Minister Abe did what he should not do. It was so deplorable."
The crowd then moved to the foreign ministry for a similar rally.