South Korea urged Japan on Monday to follow through on its pledge to fully reflect the history of a UNESCO-listed heritage site linked to wartime forced labor, after finding that Japan's conservation report failed to explain the coercive nature of workers' mobilization. The foreign ministry made the call after the World Heritage Committee (WHC) released the report submitted by Japan on the implementation of the WHC's recommendations on presenting the history of the old Sado gold and silver mine complex. The site was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list in July last year. South Korea, one of the 21 WHC members, agreed to the Sado mine's UNESCO heritage listing on condition that Japan would implement all decisions adopted by the WHC, including improving how the site is presented and interpreted. "We point out that the report shows the Japanese government has failed to faithfully implement the decisions of the WHC to fully reflect the entire history of the Sado mines on site, as well as Japan's own pledges made during the inscription process," foreign ministry spokesperson Park Il s