少妇无码精品23p_亚洲一区无码电影在线观看网站 _悠悠色一区二区_中文字幕亚洲无码第36页

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
SPORTS
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service
China Calendar


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies

Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.

Horrors of Bio-war Haunt WWII Japanese Soldier

Yoshio Shinozuka sits on the wooden steps of an old Buddhist temple just down the road from his home. It is where he will be buried.

 

Surrounded by pine trees and rice paddies, the temple is quiet save for the incessant buzzing of cicadas.

 

Frail and fast approaching his 83rd birthday, he points to a small cemetery guarded by a statue of the Goddess of Mercy that will be his final resting place.

 

"I've already chosen the plot," he says.

 

Shinozuka has had a lot of time to reflect on his youth, and his memories of those days are crystal clear. But they are laced with poison.

 

A member of Japan's Unit 731 in Northeast China in the 1930s and '40s, Shinozuka belonged to perhaps the most advanced biological weapons operation of its time.

 

As a teenager, he participated in atrocities -- vivisections and other experiments on humans -- that for millions of Chinese epitomize Japan's imperial rampage through Asia.

 

Conservative estimates place the number of the unit's victims in the thousands -- as many as 250,000, some historians believe.

 

For many years, Japan's government denied Unit 731 existed.

 

In a landmark ruling in 2002, a Japanese court finally acknowledged the unit's operations caused "immense" suffering and were "clearly inhumane." But like previous courts, it said the government had no legal obligation to atone to the victims.

 

As far as many Asians are concerned, Japan has never faced up to its past. World War II remains an open wound deeply affecting its relations with its neighbours.

 

Shinozuka, however, has devoted himself to making amends.

 

He testified on behalf of his Chinese victims. He has written a book for schoolchildren.

 

In 1998, he tried to speak at peace conferences in the United States and Canada -- but immigration inspectors turned him away as a war criminal. He accepts that label.

 

"It took me a long time to get beyond the excuse that I was just following orders," he said.

 

"I was doing what I was told. And I might very well have been killed had I disobeyed. But what we did was so terrible that I should have refused, even if that meant my own death.

 

"But I didn't do that. And I will never be forgiven."

 

In February 1939, as Japan's war machine was devouring China, a recruiter came to Shinozuka's rural high school, dressed in an army aviator's uniform and promising a bright future for those who signed up.

 

There would be college scholarships and possible careers in medicine or aviation, lots of travel, the satisfaction of serving the emperor.

 

"We were all impressed," Shinozuka recalls. "It seemed like quite an opportunity."

 

Shinozuka aced the examination. "I think everybody passed that test," he said. "It was very easy."

 

Bio-warfare unit recruit

 

He was 15 years old. Two months later, he was ordered to join Unit 731 of the Epidemic Prevention and Water Purification Department of the Kwantung Army and was shipped off to its sprawling headquarters in the city of Pingfan, just outside Harbin in Japan-controlled Northeast China.

 

"The idea was that we would be responsible for providing our soldiers with safe drinking water," he said.

 

As a civilian with the unit's youth corps, Shinozuka spent most of his time in a classroom learning about basic medicine, sanitation and the spread of germs.

 

In the spring of 1940, he was given a more hands-on mission.

 

"Our unit was raising fleas and infecting them with the plague," he said. "My job was to see that they had live rats to grow on."

 

It was a simple operation -- the rats and their fleas, along with grains of wheat, were kept in small cages in a dark room. When a rat died, the fleas would naturally move away from its corpse and were then corralled by carefully placed red lights through a bathtub into a glass cylinder attached to the drain.

 

"What happened to the fleas next wasn't our concern," he said.

 

But soon after Shinozuka got his new assignment, Chinese people began dying of the plague.

 

According to documents filed by a group of Chinese victims with the Tokyo District Court in the 2002 compensation suit, Japanese military planes on the morning of October 4, 1940, dropped wheat with plague-infected fleas over the city of Quxian (today's Quzhou in East China's Zhejiang Province).

 

Despite intense efforts by townspeople to burn the infected materials, at least two dozen deaths from bubonic plague were reported there by year's end.

 

A railworker infected by the Quxian strain then spread the disease to Yiwu in Zhejiang, where more than 300 died. Hundreds more plague deaths followed in nearby areas.

 

In November 1941, Unit 731 aircraft also dropped cotton, grain and other flea-infested materials on the town of Changde, in Central China's Hunan Province, causing two outbreaks -- the second beginning the following spring when infected rats became active after surviving the winter. Overall, as many as 7,643 died.

 

"I never asked why we did what we did," Shinozuka said. "Nobody did. We weren't given any time to think about what we were doing. And there was an unspoken rule to hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil. But there is no doubt in my mind that what the Chinese say is true."

 

Shinozuka's studies continued. Back in the classroom, he learned about the mass production of typhus, cholera, anthrax and dysentery.

 

Then, in 1942, he was given another task -- preparing plague-infected people to be cut up alive.

 

Cruel and inhumane experiments

 

Prisoners were infected so that the unit could study the progress and potency of their biological weapons.

 

Samples removed from the prisoners were used to produce more bacteria.

 

"The first time, my legs were shaking so badly I could hardly stand up," Shinozuka said.

 

He knew the person on the operating table.

 

"I'd seen him a few times," he said. "He seemed like an intellectual. He wasn't even 30. But by the time he was brought in to the dissection room, he was so black with the plague that he looked like a different person. He was clearly on the verge of death."

 

In a tiled operating room, Shinozuka cleaned the victim with a scrubbing brush, front then back, then dried him off.

 

Another man used a stethoscope to make sure the victim was still alive and then assisted a third man, who quickly but methodically cut the victim open and removed his organs.

 

"We were told that it was crucial to extract the specimens before putrefaction had time to set in and contaminate our research," Shinozuka said.

 

"The room didn't have a clock, but I guess the operations took about four hours. I will never forget the feeling of being there."

 

Shinozuka personally participated in three more vivisections.

 

"We called the victims 'logs,'" he said. "We didn't want to think of them as people. We didn't want to admit that we were taking lives. So we convinced ourselves that what we were doing was like cutting down a tree. When you see someone in that state, you just can't move. Your mind goes blank. The fear is overwhelming."

 

Shinozuka was now 20 years old.

 

The next year, he was formally drafted into the army.

 

When the war ended in August 1945, Shinozuka was a lance corporal with a medical unit in Northeast China.

 

Separated from his superiors in the chaos of defeat, he was caught up in the Chinese civil war and imprisoned for a year by the People's Liberation Army under the leadership of the Communist Party of China.

 

When he got out, many of his countrymen had been repatriated. Alone and forgotten, he had nowhere to go.

 

"But the People's Liberation Army took me in," he said. "They treated me well, and I enjoyed serving with them."

 

After six years, his past with Unit 731 was discovered. He was sent to a re-education camp, where he remained until 1956.

 

Oddly enough, he said, he has fond memories of his detention there.

 

"The camp was built by the Japanese, and it was quite spacious and comfortable," he said.

 

"We ate better than the guards. They showed us movies and played music for us. We were allowed to play sports. It was much better than life in Pingfan."

 

In the camp, Shinozuka began to reflect on his actions with Unit 731.

 

"I began to be a human again," he said. "Had they been harsh with me, I might have gone into my shell. But they treated me as a person, and I had to think of them as people. I began to think of the victims as people, too."

 

Shinozuka said that although he initially lied about his Unit 731 activities, saying he was researching new vaccines, he gradually began confessing the truth.

 

Gratitude to the Chinese

 

"I don't think they had much use for what I was telling them," he said. "But they sent me home with a pardon. I was never charged."

 

Every May, a couple of dozen of Shinozuka's comrades from the re-education camp join him at the temple in Yokaichiba, a village about 100 kilometres (60 miles) east of Tokyo.

 

Near the Shinozuka family plot, they have built a simple stone monument to Japan's Chinese victims.

 

"We express our endless gratitude to the Chinese people, and our deepest apologies," the monument says.

 

Of the 1,109 prisoners returned from the camp in 1956, few if any were Unit 731 members. Those unit leaders who made it back to Japan were spared prosecution in exchange for turning over information to the United States.

 

One rose to prominence in Japan's pharmaceutical industry. Others went to work for the Health Ministry.

 

Back in Japan, but with no home to return to, Shinozuka managed to get a job with the local government office and kept it until his retirement.

 

Though he often wanted to tell his story, "no one wanted to hear what I was saying," he said.

 

"The Japanese prefer to think of themselves as victims in the war. Even the peace movement people told me that talking about Japan's role as an aggressor wasn't constructive.

 

"But I couldn't let this piece of history remain in the dark."

 

In 1997, the same year he raised the monument, he testified on behalf of the 180 Chinese suing Japan for compensation.

 

The court denied them compensation and they began an appeal on September 2.

 

Health permitting, Shinozuka intends to be at some of the hearings.

 

In recent years he has visited China often and has been back to Unit 731's former headquarters. The site is now a museum.

 

"The Chinese have been very generous with me," he said. "They tell me that I, too, am a victim."

 

(China Daily September 20, 2004)

 

Print This Page | Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
成人在激情在线视频| 免费一级片在线| 欧美电影免费看大全| 国产精品免费久久| 日韩免费在线视频| 日本乱中文字幕系列| 美女免费精品视频在线观看| 日韩专区一区| 九九久久国产精品| 日韩中文字幕一区| 好男人天堂网 久久精品国产这里是免费 国产精品成人一区二区 男人天堂网2021 男人的天堂在线观看 丁香六月综合激情 | 成人影视在线播放| 欧美18性精品| 天天色成人| 97视频免费在线观看| 一级毛片视频免费| 免费的黄色小视频| 精品久久久久久中文字幕一区| 天天做日日爱夜夜爽| 成人影视在线播放| 深夜做爰性大片中文| a级精品九九九大片免费看| 韩国三级视频网站| 欧美国产日韩在线| 麻豆污视频| 国产不卡在线观看| 亚洲精品中文一区不卡| 欧美1卡一卡二卡三新区| 国产一区二区精品尤物| 日韩在线观看免费完整版视频| 中文字幕一区二区三区精彩视频| 日韩免费片| 九九久久国产精品| 亚洲精品中文一区不卡| 国产一区免费在线观看| 日日日夜夜操| 欧美a级成人淫片免费看| 国产麻豆精品免费密入口| 午夜在线影院| 人人干人人插| 久草免费在线观看| 欧美激情一区二区三区中文字幕| 亚洲爆爽| 九九干| 好男人天堂网 久久精品国产这里是免费 国产精品成人一区二区 男人天堂网2021 男人的天堂在线观看 丁香六月综合激情 | 亚洲第一页乱| 成人高清视频在线观看| 九九免费高清在线观看视频| 一a一级片| 日韩欧美一二三区| 国产网站在线| 国产激情视频在线观看| 成人免费福利片在线观看| 欧美大片一区| 久久精品免视看国产明星| 中文字幕一区二区三区 精品| 欧美a级片视频| 久久国产影院| 中文字幕一区二区三区 精品| 午夜激情视频在线观看| 亚洲女人国产香蕉久久精品| 亚洲女初尝黑人巨高清在线观看| 九九热国产视频| 香蕉视频一级| 国产伦精品一区二区三区无广告 | 精品在线视频播放| 欧美a级片免费看| 国产成人精品综合| 精品久久久久久中文字幕2017| 韩国毛片 免费| 日韩一级黄色| 国产麻豆精品视频| 欧美a级v片不卡在线观看| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线| 精品视频一区二区| 香蕉视频久久| 可以免费看污视频的网站| 国产精品免费久久| 精品国产一区二区三区国产馆| 国产麻豆精品视频| 青青青草视频在线观看| 国产成人啪精品视频免费软件| 亚洲女人国产香蕉久久精品| 欧美大片a一级毛片视频| 日韩中文字幕一区| 二级片在线观看| 亚洲精品中文一区不卡| 成人影院久久久久久影院| 久久成人综合网| 精品国产一区二区三区精东影业| 一a一级片| 亚洲精品久久久中文字| 精品国产一区二区三区免费| 国产原创视频在线| 国产成人欧美一区二区三区的| 日本久久久久久久 97久久精品一区二区三区 狠狠色噜噜狠狠狠狠97 日日干综合 五月天婷婷在线观看高清 九色福利视频 | 亚久久伊人精品青青草原2020| 国产成人啪精品| 台湾美女古装一级毛片| 亚洲 欧美 成人日韩| 黄视频网站免费| 精品在线视频播放| 亚洲女人国产香蕉久久精品| 国产美女在线观看| 精品国产一区二区三区久久久蜜臀| 国产成人精品综合| 国产不卡在线播放| 日本在线www| 好男人天堂网 久久精品国产这里是免费 国产精品成人一区二区 男人天堂网2021 男人的天堂在线观看 丁香六月综合激情 | 亚洲爆爽| 久久国产一久久高清| 欧美激情一区二区三区在线| 四虎影视久久久免费| 国产高清在线精品一区a| 999久久66久6只有精品| 成人免费福利片在线观看| 天天做人人爱夜夜爽2020毛片| 欧美激情影院| 欧美激情中文字幕一区二区| 日韩中文字幕在线观看视频| 精品久久久久久中文字幕一区| 黄视频网站在线观看| 日韩综合| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线 | 亚洲女人国产香蕉久久精品| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线观看一区 | 成人影视在线播放| 欧美大片一区| 久久精品免视看国产明星| 成人免费网站视频ww| 成人a级高清视频在线观看| 日本在线不卡免费视频一区| 欧美夜夜骑 青草视频在线观看完整版 久久精品99无色码中文字幕 欧美日韩一区二区在线观看视频 欧美中文字幕在线视频 www.99精品 香蕉视频久久 | 成人影院一区二区三区| 97视频免费在线观看| 在线观看导航| 韩国毛片免费| 青青青草影院| 国产原创视频在线| 国产成人精品综合久久久| 精品美女| 99久久精品费精品国产一区二区| 欧美一级视| 黄视频网站免费| 午夜激情视频在线播放| 欧美a级成人淫片免费看| 日韩专区亚洲综合久久| 日本免费乱理伦片在线观看2018| 久草免费在线视频| 国产高清视频免费观看| 国产网站在线| 日韩免费片| 久久精品成人一区二区三区| 午夜欧美成人久久久久久| 精品久久久久久影院免费| 精品视频免费看| 美女免费毛片| 久久国产一区二区| 999久久66久6只有精品| 免费国产在线视频| 精品在线免费播放| 欧美a级成人淫片免费看| 日本伦理片网站| 国产伦理精品| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线| 亚洲第一视频在线播放| 可以免费看污视频的网站| 韩国毛片| 欧美a免费| 免费国产在线观看不卡| 久久久成人网| 欧美1卡一卡二卡三新区| 久久成人综合网| 色综合久久天天综线观看| 国产伦理精品| 欧美日本免费| 在线观看成人网| 黄色短视屏| 国产91丝袜高跟系列| 国产精品免费久久| 亚洲不卡一区二区三区在线| 国产成人欧美一区二区三区的| 99久久精品国产国产毛片| 国产原创视频在线| 国产不卡在线看| 国产一区二区精品久久91| 欧美一区二区三区在线观看| 国产亚洲精品aaa大片| 亚久久伊人精品青青草原2020| 成人影院一区二区三区| 黄视频网站在线看| 国产精品1024在线永久免费 | 亚州视频一区二区| 日韩在线观看视频免费| 韩国三级一区| 久久精品免视看国产明星| 黄视频网站在线观看| 国产国语在线播放视频| 中文字幕97| 九九免费高清在线观看视频|