Brazilian government on Thursday apologized for human rights violations in the persecution and incarceration of Japanese immigrants in the years after World War II.
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«I want to apologize on behalf of the Brazilian state for the persecution your ancestors suffered, for all the barbarities, atrocities, cruelties, tortures, prejudice, ignorance, xenophobia and racism,» said Enea de Stutz e Almeida, president of the Amnesty Commission, an advisory board of Brazil's Ministry of Human Rights that analyzes amnesty and reparation requests to victims of political persecution in the country.
The board approved the apology plea in a session in Brasilia attended by members of the Brazilian government and prominent members of the Japanese community. Flags of both countries were displayed on the table where the speakers sat.
A report by the Amnesty Commission acknowledged that 172 immigrants were sent to a concentration camp off the coast of Sao Paulo, where they were mistreated and tortured from 1946 to 1948.
«The documents indisputably demonstrate the political persecution and justify the declaration of political amnesty for the Japanese community and their descendants,» said the commission's rapporteur, Vanda Davi Fernandes de Oliveira.
The reparation request was filed in 2015 by the Okinawa Kenjin of Brazil Association, which stated that after the outbreak of World War