Undisclosed agreement between Park government, Japan under fire in Korea

SEOUL, Jan. 12 (Yonhap) -- Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se spoke by phone with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday, the ministry said, amid heightened tensions between Seoul and Tokyo over a statue symbolizing Japan's wartime sexual slavery.
Tensions have flared anew between the two American allies after South Korean civic activists erected the girl's statue in front of Japan's consulate in the South Korean port city of Busan.
Japan has demanded the statue be removed, calling it a violation of the 2015 agreement that the two countries reached on resolving the sexual slavery issue. In protest, Tokyo has also recalled its ambassador and consul general from South Korea.
During the 15-minute call, Kerry told Yun that the South has sincerely carried out the 2015 agreement so far, and is responding to the "difficult situation" created between the South and Japan in a "restrained" manner, according to the ministry.
In response, Yun explained to Kerry the intentions and motives behind Prime Minister and acting President Hwang Kyo-ahn's recent call for refraining from acts and words aggravating the situation, the ministry said. Yun also said it's important to respect the intent and spirit of the agreement.
Yun said the South will make necessary efforts to develop relations with Japan in a future-oriented way.
The two sides exchanged views on the situation with regard to North Korea and the region and agreed that the alliance between the two countries must continue under the new U.S. administration, the ministry said.


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