KEY POINTS
  • The decision to drop South Korea from the "white list" comes a month after Japan tightened curbs on exports to South Korea of three high-tech materials needed to make memory chips and display panels.
  • The move will likely to escalate tensions fueled by a dispute over compensation for wartime forced laborers.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in walks past Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on June 28, 2019.

Japan's cabinet on Friday approved a plan to remove South Korea from a list of countries that enjoy minimum export controls, a move likely to escalate tensions fueled by a dispute over compensation for wartime forced laborers.

The decision to drop South Korea from the "white list," a step that has been protested fiercely by Seoul, comes a month after Japan tightened curbs on exports to South Korea of three high-tech materials needed to make memory chips and display panels.