Japan said Monday it will tighten regulations on
the export to South Korea of several chemicals used in chip and smartphone
production amid a row with Seoul on wartime forced labour.
The move, which takes effect from July 4, comes after
South Korean courts ordered Japanese firms to compensate people forced into
wartime labour, an issue Tokyo says was resolved when the countries resumed
diplomatic relations decades ago.
"The export control system is built based on
international relations of trust," Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and
Industry (METI) said in announcing the move.
"After reviews by relevant ministries, it must be said that the relations of trust between Japan and South Korea have been significantly harmed," METI added.
"After reviews by relevant ministries, it must be said that the relations of trust between Japan and South Korea have been significantly harmed," METI added.
The new restrictions affect chemicals including fluorinated
polyimide and hydrogen fluoride, as well as transfer of manufacturing
technologies, removing them from a list that effectively allowed expedited
export.
It means that exporters will now have to apply for permission
for each batch they wish to export to South Korea, a process that takes around
90 days each time, local media reported.
METI said it would also begin soliciting public comment on
the removal of South Korea from a list of "white" countries that face
minimal restrictions on technology transfer with national security
implications.
Japan and South Korea are both democracies, market economies
and US allies, but their relationship has been strained for decades as a result
of Tokyo's brutal 1910-45 colonial rule over the Korean peninsula.
And tensions have grown after a series of rulings from South
Korean courts ordering Japanese firms that used wartime forced labour to
compensate victims.
Last month, Tokyo proposed the issue be put to arbitration
under the terms of an agreement signed by the two countries in 1965, when ties
were normalised.
South Korea countered with a proposal for local and Japanese
firms to set up a voluntary compensation fund, which Tokyo flatly rejected as
"unacceptable".
When relations were normalised, Tokyo agreed a reparations
package that included grants and cheap loans intended to cover victims of
various wartime policies.
Japan argues that package should have permanently resolved
the issue.
Analysts said the measure could harm Japanese producers, noting shares in some of the firms that make the affected chemicals were falling on Monday despite a rally in the market overall.
Analysts said the measure could harm Japanese producers, noting shares in some of the firms that make the affected chemicals were falling on Monday despite a rally in the market overall.
"It could have a short-term negative impact on Japanese
manufacturers... whose sales to major South Korean producers constitute 10 to
20 percent of their overall sales," said Kazuyoshi Saito, a chip analyst
at IwaiCosmo Securities.
"At this point, the expected impact is a slowing of export
procedures, which may temporarily affect both South Korean makers and Japanese
suppliers," he told AFP.
No comments:
Post a Comment