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Oldest Korean victim of Japan's wartime sexual slavery dies, reducing total surviving victims to 15

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Jeong Bok-soo

The oldest living South Korean woman who was forced into sexual slavery by Japan before and during World War II died Friday, a civic group said, reducing the number of the country's registered surviving victims to 15.

Jeong Bok-soo died at the age of 105, according to the House of Sharing, a facility in Gwangju, Gyeonggi Province, that supports sex slave victims.

The facility said her funeral will be held privately according to a Christian format. It decided not to disclose Jeong's story and profile at her bereaved family's request.

Jeong's age was listed as 105 in the government's database as she apparently inherited the census registration records of her deceased older sister, but her actual age was 98, officials said.

At either age, Jeong was the oldest among sex slave victims here, according to officials. She had been staying at the House of Sharing since 2013, until recently when her health began to deteriorate and she was hospitalized.

"When I visited the House of Sharing on Wednesday, she was hospitalized, and I wished for her recovery," Minister of Gender Equality and Family Chung Young-ai said. "I am saddened to hear that she has passed away."

Chung said her ministry will further improve its policies to help the remaining victims live in good health and comfort in their old age, and actively pursue projects to restore their honor and dignity.

Historians estimate that up to 200,000 women, mostly from Korea, were forced to work in front-line brothels for Japanese troops before and during the war. (Yonhap)