The symbolism travels with it wherever it goes.
At a reserve in Auckland's Takapuna, a quiet stretch of parkland called Barry's Point is at the center of a diplomatic dispute that reaches back more than eighty years. The question before local authorities is whether to install a bronze statue — a seated girl beside an empty chair — in the Korean Cultural Garden there. The answer, it turns out, is not a local one.
The statue was offered to New Zealand by the Korean Council for Justice and Remembrance, an advocacy group dedicated to commemorating the survivors of wartime sexual slavery. The design mirrors the Statue of Peace, created by sculptors Kim Seo-kyung and Kim Eun-sung and installed in Seoul in 2011, directly facing the Japanese Embassy. That original placement was itself a statement. The Auckland proposal carries the same symbolic weight, and Japan's government knows it.
Historians estimate that between 20,000 and 200,000 women — most of them Korean, but also drawn from China, the Philippines, and other countries — were coerced into sexual servitude for the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces during the Second World War. They were held in frontline makeshift brothels and forced to have sex with soldiers between ten and thirty times a day. Many did not survive. Those who did carried the damage for the rest of their lives.
The Devonport-Takapuna local board is scheduled to take up the matter at its April 28 meeting. Auckland Council opened a three-week submission window in January and received 672 responses. The split was close but not even: 57 percent opposed the installation, 43 percent supported it. The Japanese and South Korean communities each made up roughly a third of all submissions, reflecting just how charged the question is for people with direct cultural stakes in the outcome.
Those in favor argued the statue would honor survivors, advance human rights education, and signal that New Zealand takes wartime violence against women seriously. The Refugee Women's Council of New Zealand put it plainly in its submission, saying a public symbol of acceptance would reduce harm for survivors of sexual violence in war and help diverse communities feel included in public life here.
The opposition was led, in formal terms, by Japanese Ambassador Makoto Osawa, who submitted on behalf of the Japanese Embassy. His concerns were layered. He warned that the statue's installation could damage not just community relations between Japanese and Korean New Zealanders, but diplomatic ties between Japan and New Zealand at a broader level. He also flagged that the $75,000 in New Zealand government funding that went toward developing the Korean garden back in 2015 could create the impression that Wellington was implicitly endorsing the statue's message.
Osawa's submission acknowledged that the Japanese government does not deny the existence of the comfort women issue. But it pointed to a 2015 bilateral agreement between Japan and South Korea — one that both governments described at the time as a final and irreversible resolution — and an NZD$11 million payment to a Reconciliation and Healing Foundation as evidence that the matter had been addressed through official channels. Critics, including survivors, advocacy groups, and independent scholars, have long disputed whether those efforts constituted genuine accountability.
The ambassador also invoked the current geopolitical moment, arguing that as the Indo-Pacific security environment grows more complicated, solidarity among democracies like Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea matters more than ever. Revisiting a question he characterized as already settled, he suggested, risked burdening those relationships unnecessarily.
Similar statues have already generated diplomatic friction between Japan and the United States, Germany, and Australia, so the pattern Osawa is warning about is not hypothetical. What makes the Auckland case distinct is its setting: a multicultural city, a community garden, a local board meeting that is usually open to the public and streamed online. The decision will be made at the most local level of government, but its reverberations, if the statue goes up, will travel much further. The April 28 meeting is the next moment to watch.
Notable Quotes
The installation of the statue could have a significant impact not only on relations between peoples and local governments in both countries, but also on diplomatic relations between Japan and New Zealand.— Japanese Ambassador Makoto Osawa, in his submission to Auckland Council
A public symbol of acceptance and understanding will lead not only to reduce harm for survivors of sexual violence in war, but help our diverse communities to feel included in public life here in Aotearoa.— Refugee Women's Council of New Zealand, submission to Auckland Council
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why would a local park statue in Auckland become a matter for a national embassy?
Because the statue isn't really about the park. It's a replica of a design that was deliberately placed facing Japan's embassy in Seoul. The symbolism travels with it wherever it goes.
Is Japan's concern about the statue itself, or about what it represents politically?
Both, but the ambassador is careful to frame it as diplomatic rather than historical. He's not saying the comfort women issue didn't happen — he explicitly says Japan doesn't deny it. He's saying the statue is a tool of criticism, and that installing it damages relationships.
What do the submission numbers tell us?
That this landed hard in both communities. Japanese and South Korean New Zealanders each made up about a third of all responses. The opposition edged out support, but not by a wide margin. It's not a clear community consensus either way.
The 2015 agreement keeps coming up. What's the dispute around it?
Japan and South Korea's governments called it final and irreversible. But survivors and advocacy groups said they were never meaningfully consulted, and that an $11 million payment to a foundation didn't constitute real accountability or acknowledgment of what was done.
What's the human scale of what the statue is meant to commemorate?
Historians put the number of women at somewhere between 20,000 and 200,000. They were held in frontline brothels and forced to have sex with soldiers up to thirty times a day. Many died. The ones who survived often lived with severe trauma for decades, many in silence.
Is there something unusual about this decision landing at a local board level?
Very. A local board in Takapuna doesn't normally find itself navigating Indo-Pacific geopolitics. But that's exactly what's happened. The ambassador's submission essentially asks a community committee to weigh in on a bilateral diplomatic question.
What happens if the board approves it?
The statue goes into a cultural garden that received New Zealand government funding. Japan has already said that could look like official endorsement. Whether Wellington responds formally is the next unknown.