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The Daily Telegraph has reproduced facsimiles of the newspaper printed during WW2, along with a magazine which includes witness accounts. The following account comes from part 22 of the collection, a Japanese Artillery Lieutenants diary. "Jan 31st. An American prisoner of war was killed, first Hosogawa bayoneted him from behind, which gave the men much amusement. Then he stuck him in the stomach. He did not die at once, but of course it is not permitted to waste bullets when killing prisoners of war. After dinner we killed three more." -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The only apology from Japan I am aware of was many years after the war ended. Dutch POW's on being released from their captors, handed out the same treatment to their guards as they were given, resulting in the death of the majority of Japanese. Both the Dutch and Japanese apologised to each other, to my mind the Dutch had nothing to apologise for. |
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[QUOTE=BritinAfrica;609667]http://www.ww2-eyewitness.com/ww2-sa/magazine-sa.html
The Daily Telegraph has reproduced facsimiles of the newspaper printed during WW2, along with a magazine which includes witness accounts. The following account comes from part 22 of the collection, a Japanese Artillery Lieutenants diary. "Jan 31st. An American prisoner of war was killed, first Hosogawa bayoneted him from behind, which gave the men much amusement. Then he stuck him in the stomach. He did not die at once, but of course it is not permitted to waste bullets when killing prisoners of war. After dinner we killed three more." -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The only apology from Japan I am aware of was many years after the war ended. Dutch POW's on being released from their captors, handed out the same treatment to their guards as they were given, resulting in the death of the majority of Japanese. Both the Dutch and Japanese apologised to each other, to my mind the Dutch had nothing to apologise for.[/QUOTE One has to understand that, a Japanese soldier was taught that surrender was cowardly, an insult to their ancestors and turning ones' back upon the emperor. Therefore, any prisoners they held were considered the same and did not deserve any "humane" treatment. Nobody knows for sure just how many Allied prisoners or soldiers were killed by their guards. Also, little is ever reported about how the Japanese slaughtered hundreds of thousands of Chinese during their rape of that country before WWII. ![]() |
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The patients in a Hong Kong hospital who were bayoneted and tortured in their beds, didn't surrender, they couldn't move to surrender. Then the rape and torture of women nurses, then there are the nurses captured in Singapore who were herded into the sea and machine gunned. These are the actions of soldiers? Quote:
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These are the actions of soldiers? They were no more and no less savages of the worst kind. An ex 14th Army soldier who was a POW on the Burma railway once said during a TV interview, "Not only were we the forgotten army, we are also the forgotten POW's." |
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A great many Germans that I have met are ashamed of what happened in their name, and as for War Criminals then I think South America and the Vatican had a lot to answer. Yet you shelter Von Braun the rocket scientist and he was involved in all sorts of things while Hitler was in power.
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