
N. Korean students protest exclusion from tuition-free aid
Students from the schools, which are affiliated with the pro-Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon), continue staging weekly Friday protests in front of the education ministry building in Tokyo's Chiyoda Ward.
From April, the government will provide up to 118,800 yen ($810) annually to all households with a high school student, regardless of income, effectively making public high schools tuition free.
The system to alleviate the financial burden of households with high schoolers started in 2010. At the time, public high school tuition became free and some financial aid for households with children who attend private high schools also was provided.
However, a total of 10 "Chosen Gakko" North Korea-affiliated schools nationwide have been excluded from the system. They were also excluded this time from the latest financial education assistance.
While some accuse the government of discrimination, others say that the Korean schools should change with the times.
PUBLIC PROTESTS CONTINUE
On March 7, 110 students from Tokyo Korean Junior and Senior High School assembled for their weekly protest at the education ministry building.
The students shouted, 'We want to take pride in our roots,' 'The only place we can learn the Korean language and culture is Korean schools,' and 'Apply the system to our school.'
The weekly 'Friday action' of these students and their Japanese supporters marked the 560th time since the protests started in May 2013.
According to the education ministry, because the system intends to 'secure education for all students who are willing to study,' schools for foreign students such as Chinese and Brazilian schools have been covered by the system. However, the Korean schools have been excluded.
The exclusion from the tuition-free system started from the Democratic Party-controlled administration in 2010, and in 2013, after the Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, Komeito, regained power, the administration officially announced the exclusion.
'There is no progress in the abduction issue, and the Korean schools have close ties with the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, which supports the North Korean administration,' said Hakubun Shimomura, then education minister.
According to the website of Tokyo Korean Junior and Senior High School and other sources, Korean schools in Japan took root from lecture halls built in some places in Japan after World War II.
The schools were started by Koreans who felt they were deprived of their native language while Japan ruled the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945.
Because the schools suffer from financial difficulties, North Korean authorities have provided financial assistance to them since the 1950s.
'We hope our students will integrate into Japanese society as Koreans,' Yoon Tae Gil, principal of Tokyo Korean Junior and Senior High School, said of the school's educational policy.
FOURTH-GENERATION KOREAN STUDENTS
Yoon said that most students of the Tokyo Korean Junior and Senior High School are fourth-generation Koreans living in Japan. Their native language is Japanese, and 30 to 40 percent of them will continue on to attend Japanese universities.
In public, they do not differ from Japanese high school students, in conversing on topics such as Korean TV dramas and dating.
The lessons are basically taught in Korean at the Korean schools. Students learn about the history of the Japanese colonial period, but also math and science are taught in accordance with the Japanese standard school curriculum.
However, students learn about the modern history of North Korea, and in their textbooks, honorific titles are used for important figures such as former President Kim Il Sung. Students also visit North Korea for school graduation trips.
'It may look strange to Japanese, but we can't keep being separated from ethnicity education and our home country, which supported us during our hardest times,' Yoon said.
The school teaches students that North Korea was wrong to abduct Japanese citizens during the 1970s and 1980s
The tuition of the schools is about 30,000 yen ($206) per month. So, Yoon said there are some families that are forced to give up on having their children attend Korean schools.
According to the education ministry, Korean school students nationwide numbered 802 in 2023, which is about half of the enrollment in 2014. Some people are concerned that Korean schools could disappear.
'We can't discontinue our school, which is the center of our Korean community,' said an 18-year-old student from Tokyo Korean Junior and Senior High School, who has participated in the Friday protests.
Another participant, who now attends a Japanese private university in Tokyo and used to go to a Korean school, passes out fliers every month calling for realizing tuition-free Korean schools. He wants the school's future secured, which had always affirmed his Korean identity.
But the prolonged exclusion by the Japanese government makes him feel helpless.
A 26-year-old woman who works for a Japanese company after graduating from a Korean school in the Kanto region said, 'Unless Japanese society's evaluation of North Korea changes, Korean schools will not be accepted.'
FAILS IN 5 LAWSUITS NATIONWIDE
Challenging the exclusion of Korean schools from the tuition-free education system, Korean school graduates filed lawsuits in five district courts in Japan between 2013 and 2014.
One court ruled the exclusion was illegal, but all the lawsuits proceeded to the Supreme Court, which ruled against them.
The courts determined that the Korean schools were affiliated with the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan and that they teach students to regard North Korean leaders as absolute figures, which is prohibited as 'improper control' under the Basic Education Law.
Journalist Jiro Ishimaru, 62, who has covered North Korea for more than 30 years, criticized the exclusion of Korean schools from the tuition-free system.
'It is a sanction against North Korea mainly because of the abduction issue,' he said. 'Children who are not directly involved in the issue are burdened with the issue and it is discrimination.'
The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination of the United Nations issued an advisory to the Japanese government not to discriminate against Korean schools.
Meanwhile, Ishimaru points out that teaching at the Korean schools advocates for the continuation of the North Korean dictatorship. He believes that this educational philosophy is also the reason for the decreasing number of students at Korean schools.
'Korean schools and the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan should discuss this with a wide range of Koreans, including those who are living apart from Korean communities in Japan,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Asahi Shimbun
3 hours ago
- Asahi Shimbun
Citing manpower shortage, SDF to end annual review ceremony
The review ceremony held at the Ground Self-Defense Force's Asaka training field in Asaka, Saitama Prefecture, on Oct. 14, 2018, involved amphibious vehicles from Japanese and U.S. forces. The ceremony was attended by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. (Asahi Shimbun file photo) The Defense Ministry said it will no longer hold an annual Self-Defense Forces review ceremony held in the presence of the prime minister because personnel are too busy trying to keep Japan safe from outside threats. In its July 30 announcement, the ministry also cited a severe manpower shortage as adding to the burden of hosting the parade. The annual ceremony was the most prestigious event on the SDF calendar. It had been hosted in turns by the Ground, Maritime and Air arms of the SDF and was attended by the prime minister in his capacity as the supreme commander. Ministry officials had been weighing the decision for more than six months. At the beginning of the year when Kazuo Masuda served as vice defense minister, he broached scrapping the review ceremony during a meeting with Gen Nakatani in the defense minister's office in Tokyo's Ichigaya district. 'With the MSDF increasingly busy with training exercises and missions in and outside the country, I think it will be difficult to continue the fleet review in the way it has been held to date,' Masuda told him. Gen. Yoshihide Yoshida, then chief of staff of the SDF's Joint Staff and top uniformed officer, later joined the discussions along with other senior officials. Eventually, Nakatani confirmed the intentions of the chiefs of staff of the Ground, Maritime and Air units and decided to end the review ceremony. 'It is difficult to maintain a seamless defense system if we have to hold the ceremony every year,' Nakatani said during a news conference on Aug. 1. NO AUDIENCE SINCE 2020 Like military parades everywhere, the ceremony featured the latest defense equipment and a strong turnout of SDF members, placing a heavy burden on personnel due to a chronic manpower shortage. The ceremony had been held on a reduced scale after the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and with no audience since 2020. A senior ministry official called the decision a 'wise one.' The MSDF pushed to discontinue the ceremony. 'We have been asking for it to be discontinued for the past 10 years,' a senior official said. MSDF warning and surveillance missions have sharply increased in recent years due to China's growing maritime assertiveness. To deal with increased surveillance missions, the MSDF had to deploy minesweepers because destroyers alone were not up to the task without help. Bringing in key vessels for the event ties them up for nearly one month if they come from distant waters for the review held in Sagami Bay on the Pacific coast. The MSDF had to gather its ships from across the country to use them as lookout vessels to prevent fishing boats from entering the zone during the event. 'The fleet review could reveal shortcomings in our maritime defense,' a senior MSDF official said. While the full quota of the SDF is about 247,000, the ratio of personnel to the staffing goal stood at 89.1 percent at the end of fiscal 2024, falling short of 90 percent for the first time in 25 years. SDF recruitment in fiscal 2024, which ended in March, came to 9,724, or just 65 percent of its target. The staffing ratio of low-ranking personnel was 60.7 percent. 'We are having a hard time recruiting young people,' said a ministry source, blaming the falling birthrate. The review ceremony had been held annually since 1951, hosted by the SDF's predecessor, the National Police Reserve. It was aimed at promoting a deeper understanding of the SDF among the public through general visitors. However, a Cabinet Office survey showed that in recent years, about 90 percent of the public harbors a favorable impression of the SDF. 'PR is important, but national defense missions must be the priority,' said a senior official, sharing a widespread view in the ministry. SAPPORO SNOW FESTIVAL In another change, it was announced in May that the GSDF will have a smaller presence at the renowned Sapporo Snow Festival in Hokkaido, where its members traditionally created two massive ice statues. From now on, they will carve only one statue. Officials explained that an accumulative total of 8,000 GSDF members were tied up for more than a month to complete two statues. 'It was a difficult decision to make,' said a senior GSDF member. 'But it is a case of putting the cart before the horse when the members can't receive training because they're too busy building snow statues.' (This article was written by Mizuki Sato and Daisuke Yajima.)


Japan Today
3 hours ago
- Japan Today
Ishiba, LDP may review cash handout plan to accommodate opposition
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba delivers a speech during a welcome reception of the Ninth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD 9) in Yokohama on Wednesday. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's government and his ruling party may revise plans to deliver cash handouts of 20,000 yen to every resident of Japan, senior officials said Thursday, as they must win opposition support after an election defeat. An option has emerged within the government and the Liberal Democratic Party to limit recipients to those most in need, such as children and low-income households, rather than distributing them across the board, according to the officials. The modification of the LDP's pledge for the July 20 House of Councillors election highlights the challenges the ruling coalition faces in advancing its policy agenda, as it now holds minorities in both chambers of parliament. Ishiba's grip on power has weakened significantly, with his party expected to decide in the coming weeks whether to hold a leadership race amid calls for him to resign following the dismal upper house election result. The government and the ruling bloc are likely to draw up a supplementary budget to fund the cash handout program during a parliamentary session this fall, through negotiations with opposition parties, the officials said. Inflation-relief measures were among the priority items for voters in the upper house election. The LDP focused on the cash handout plan, creating a sharp contrast with opposition forces that promised to either reduce or abolish the consumption tax. The LDP's current plan is to distribute 20,000 yen per person. On top of that, children and adults in low-income households exempt from resident tax would get an extra 20,000 yen, bringing their total to 40,000 yen each. Ishiba and the ruling coalition have been cornered into reconsidering their plan after the election, which some opposition lawmakers -- who are pushing to have their demands accepted -- say amounted to a "no" vote on the cash handout program. Yoshihiko Noda, who leads the main opposition force, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, said cash handouts and tax cuts should come "as a package." The Japan Innovation Party has been gaining attention as the opposition force is seen working more closely with the ruling camp. But its chief, Hirofumi Yoshimura, has said the party will vote against an extra budget plan if it only delivers 20,000 yen in cash. Yuichiro Tamaki, leader of the Democratic Party for the People, said a review of the cash handout plan is only "natural," given that many voters favor tax cuts. © KYODO


Japan Today
3 hours ago
- Japan Today
S Korea's Lee intends to retain 'comfort women' pact with Japan: report
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung speaks during a ceremony to celebrate the 80th anniversary of Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule, in Seoul, South Korea, on Aug. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said he intended to stick to existing agreements with Japan tied to its colonial rule of the Korean peninsula, including one on the treatment of Korean women forced to work in its military brothels. The legacy of Japan's colonization from 1910 to 1945 is politically sensitive for both countries, with many surviving "comfort women", a Japanese euphemism for the sex abuse victims, still demanding Tokyo's formal apology and compensation. Lee, whose liberal Democratic Party has opposed the deal, made the comments in an interview with Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper published on Thursday ahead of his Tokyo summit this week with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. "For South Korean people, that agreement by the previous administration is very difficult to accept, but it is a promise as a nation, so it is undesirable to overturn it," Lee told the paper, referring to the 2015 pact. In that agreement, struck with South Korea's then-conservative government, Japan apologized to the victims and gave 1 billion yen ($6.8 million) to a fund to help them. The governments agreed the issue would be "irreversibly resolved" if both fulfilled their obligations. The issues around comfort women and forced labor during wartime have regularly been a source of friction between Japan and neighbors South Korea and China. Lee said the victims were a "heartbreaking issue" for South Koreans and urged Japan to acknowledge the truth and continue to talk to them, the paper added. Japan was a "very important country" and he wanted to strengthen economic and security ties with Tokyo, Lee said, as he reiterated the importance of three-way ties with Japan and the United States, the paper said. After the Tokyo summit, Lee will head to Washington to meet U.S. President Donald Trump. Lee's interview touched on security issues, particularly the shared concern with Japan over the nuclear and missile programs of their neighbor North Korea. Both countries have stepped up security cooperation with key ally the United States in recent years to counter North Korea's threats. Lee said his administration would lay the groundwork to ultimately dismantle North Korea's nuclear weapons program, through talks with Pyongyang and close cooperation with Washington. "(Our) policy direction is the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula," Lee's office quoted him as saying in the interview. "Phase 1 is a freeze on nuclear weapons and missiles, Phase 2 is reduction, and Phase 3 is denuclearization." North Korea has so far dismissed Lee's peace overtures as "gibberish" and a "pipe dream." © Thomson Reuters 2025.