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Leaders of South Korea and Japan meet to resolve dispute
The leaders of South Korea and Japan have had talks for the first time in over a year in an attempt to resolve a long-running dispute.
President Moon Jae-in and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe briefly met at the Asean summit of Asian nations in Bangkok, Thailand.
A bitter row over wartime compensation escalated recently.
In August, Japan removed South Korea from its list of trusted trade partners.
At the heart of the dispute are the "comfort women" of Japan. Tens of thousands of Korean women - some say as many as 200,000 - were forced to work in brothels for Japanese soldiers during World War Two.
South Koreans want reparations but Japan considers the issue settled. It has apologised or acknowledged its responsibility for wartime sex slaves before - most recently in 2015 when the country also promised to set up a 1bn yen ($9.5m, 拢7.9m) fund to assist the victims.
It has however resisted giving greater compensation, arguing that the dispute was settled in 1965 when diplomatic ties were normalised between the two countries and more than $800m in economic aid and loans was given to South Korea.
But critics argue the victims were never consulted. A dozen surviving "comfort women" demand a direct apology and compensation from the Japanese government.
South Korea's presidential spokeswoman said on Monday that both countries wanted to end the dispute through dialogue.
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