
AP: Man Protests Sex Slaves at Japan Embassy
A South Korean activist scaled a wall of the Japanese Embassy on Wednesday and staged a brief protest of Tokyo's refusal to acknowledge it forced Korean and Chinese women to work as sex slaves during World War II. Oh Sung-taek stomped on a Japanese flag and shouted anti-Japanese slogans for 10 minutes atop one of the buildings before he was removed by police, witnesses and a police officer said. He wore a placard with a picture of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that read: "Destroy History Distortion". Oh was among 100 protesters gathered outside the embassy for a rally that has been held every Wednesday since 1992 to demand that Japan apologize and compensate World War II sex slaves, also called "comfort women" for Japanese troops.