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  1. Feb 20, 2018 · A Nationalist officer guarding women prisoners said to be “comfort girls” used by the Communists, 1948. “Recruiting” women for the brothels amounted to kidnapping or coercing them.

  2. Comfort women were women and girls forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces in occupied countries and territories before and during World War II. The term comfort women is a translation of the Japanese ianfu (ja:慰安婦), which literally means "comforting, consoling woman".

  3. Sep 22, 2021 · "Comfort women" were forced by the Imperial Japanese Army into sexual slavery before and during World War II. More than 200,000 women in China and more than 100,000 on the Korean Peninsula were forced into sex slavery, according to the Memorial Hall of the Victims in Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders.

  4. Up to 200,000 women were forced into working at these comfort stations, one of the world’s biggest historical instances of human trafficking, according to Amnesty International. Chang has stated that we will never know the full psychic toll that the mass rapes had on the women of Nanking.

  5. Dec 4, 2020 · The Japanese army forced some 200,000 women into sexual slavery during World War II. They were known as "comfort women." This special report tells the stories of the survivors in the...

  6. “Comfort women” refers to the system of sexual slavery created and controlled by the Imperial Japanese government between 1932 and 1945. It is the largest case of government-sponsored human trafficking and sexual slavery in modern history.

  7. Minnie Vautrin was a Christian missionary who established Ginling Girls College in Nanking, which was within the established Safety Zone. During the massacre, she worked tirelessly in welcoming thousands of female refugees to stay in the college campus, sheltering up to 10,000 women.