'We have to get along': Japan's Korean residents at sharp end of diplomatic row
The Guardian · by · September 29, 2019weather ってのは、「しのぐ」っていう意味があるんだね。The move prompted anger in South Korea, where many still resent Japan's colonial rule of the peninsula from 1910 to 1945. The government saw the measure as retaliation for the court rulings against Japanese firms, and promptly removed Japan from its own "white list" of trading partners that receive preferential treatment.However, some shop owners said their businesses were weathering the diplomatic storm. "It hasn't really affected us, but that's probably because young people are less interested in politics," says Choi Dong-han, whose store sells K-pop memorabilia.
Young Japanese devotees of South Korea's most successful cultural export still flock here to buy posters, DVDs and miniature figures of BTS, Tohoshinki and Big Bang, added Choi, who moved to Tokyo from South Korea two decades ago. "But I hope Japan and South Korea can sort out their differences. We're neighbours, so we have to get along."
Relations, however, are far from neighbourly. Seoul has called on the International Olympic Committee to ban Japan's rising-sun flag - seen by some Koreans as a symbol of Japanese militarism - from next year's Summer Games in Tokyo. A recent poll found that South Koreans trust North Korea more than they do Japan.
日本では不買運動なんてやってないんだよ、マッカリくん。
全国規模で反日不買運動をやっているのは韓国なんだよ。
日本でやったら、右翼の台頭とか全体主義とか、激烈な言葉を使う批評家を引用して批判しただろう。
おかしいだろう、君等、外国特派員は?
在日の人が脅迫されたとか言っているけどね、具体的にどんな脅迫で警察に訴えたんですかねええ?
この手の作文記事、もう飽きたよ、マッカリくん。
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