Nearly 80 years after the US authorized the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, California plans to formally apologize this week for its role in one of the darkest chapters in US history.

State lawmakers are set to vote on Thursday on a resolution which states that the California legislature apologizes for “the unjust exclusion, removal, and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, and for its failure to support and defend the civil rights and civil liberties of Japanese Americans.”

More than 120,000 Japanese-Americans were sent to 10 concentration camps throughout western states and Arkansas during World War II after President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an executive order.

The February 19, 1942 order came just two months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

“The apology is especially pertinent now with President (Donald) Trump in office,” Democratic assembly member Al Muratsuchi, who introduced the bill, told AFP in a statement.