Japan will tighten curbs on exports of high-tech materials used in smartphone displays and chips to South Korea amid a growing dispute over South Koreans forced to work for Japanese firms during the Second World War, the Industry Ministry said on Monday.

Tighter export controls, effective from July 4, would slow the export process by several months, hitting South Korean tech giants, such as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

The step comes amid Tokyo's growing frustration at what it calls a lack of action by Seoul over issues stemming from its top court ruling last October that ordered Nippon Steel to compensate former forced labourers.

‘Unfair measure’

South Korea's Deputy Minister for Trade said Japan's curbs would violate World Trade Organisation rules and Seoul would respond. “We will firmly respond to this unfair measure by Japan that violates international law,” Park Tae-sung told reporters.

South Korea's Finance Minister also called a meeting to discuss plans, officials said.

Japan rejected South Korea's proposal last month to create a joint compensation fund for victims with contributions from both nations' companies. “South Korea has failed to show any satisfactory measures to resolve the forced labour issue...and severely damaged mutual trust,” said an official of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. “As trust has been lost, we cannot have a dialogue and are unable to ensure that proper export controls are being taken,” he told a news briefing.

The neighbours share a bitter history dating to the Japanese colonisation of the Korean peninsula from 1910 to 1945, including forced use of labour by Japanese companies and the use of comfort women, a euphemism for girls and women, many of them Korean, forced to work in its wartime brothels.

Japan, which says the issue of forced labour was fully settled in 1965 when the two countries restored diplomatic ties, has denounced the rulings and urged the launch of an arbitration panel.

Chipmakers hit

The materials to be restricted are fluorinated polyimides, used in smartphone displays, as well as resist and high-purity hydrogen fluoride (HF), which is used as an etching gas to make semiconductors.

Resist is a thin layer used to transfer a circuit pattern to the semiconductor substrate. High-purity HF is used in etching silicon materials.

Japan will stop preferential treatment for shipments of these three materials to South Korea, requiring exporters to seek permission each time they want to ship, which takes about 90 days, the ministry official said.

Japan produces about 90 per cent of fluorinated polyimides and resist worldwide as well as about 70 per cent of etching gas, making it difficult for chipmakers to find alternatives, said the Sankei newspaper, which reported the plans on Sunday.

A source at one of South Korea's top memory chipmakers said that they would have to try to build stockpiles, adding that the company relies on Japan for more than 70 per cent of its resists and etching gas.

Samsung Elec, the world's top memory maker, said it was looking into the matter, but offered no further comment. SK Hynix declined comment.

In Tokyo, shares of resist maker JSR and fluorochemicals maker Kanto Denka Kogyo plunged.

Govt intervention?

Japan also plans to strip white list status from South Korea under trade control law, requiring Japanese exporters to seek a licence for items that could be used in some weapons-related applications.

On Japan's white list are 27 countries, from Germany to South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States.

South Korean exporters and experts urged the administration of President Moon Jae-in to step in and resolve the tension. “This is not a problem starting from the business sector, and I think our government should stand up and try to fix this while companies are taking a hit,” Lee Soo-chul, a board member of the Seoul-Tokyo Forum, a private foundation of diplomats and businessmen from both countries, told Reuters .

“But I am not sure if the current government is realising how critical this situation is,” said Lee, a former head of Samsung Group's Japanese operations.

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