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SINO DAILY
Nanjing massacre memorial stirs strong emotions in China
by Staff Writers
Nanjing, China (AFP) Feb 28, 2014


Japan says puzzled by new China WWII national days
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 28, 2014 - Tokyo on Friday said it was puzzled over why Beijing approved national remembrance days to commemorate the Nanjing Massacre and its defeat in World War II, after decades of Japanese pacifism.

The move is the latest in a vitriolic diplomatic spat between Asia's two largest economies, who are at loggerheads over disputed territory and differing interpretations of their shared history.

Meanwhile, Tokyo said it was pressing ahead with a controversial plan to re-examine evidence on which a 1993 apology for the system of wartime sex slavery was based, an issue that provokes particularly strong feelings in South Korea.

State media in China reported Thursday that the National People's Congress, the rubberstamp parliament, had designated September 3 as victory day and December 13 as a day to remember those killed when imperial troops raped and pillaged the then-capital of Nanjing.

Japan invaded China in the 1930s and the two countries fought a full-scale war from 1937 to 1945.

China says more than 300,000 people were slaughtered by Japanese troops in a six-week killing spree in Nanjing, which started on December 13, 1937. Some foreign academics put the figure lower.

It was unclear what significance the formal "national days" will have, although they are not expected to be public holidays.

Japan's top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said Friday he could not understand why China had made this change at this point.

"I can't deny there is a question why they have to set up these commemoration days more than 60 years after the war," he said.

"But this is a domestic matter for China, so the government declines to comment on it.

"Japan's position on World War II has not changed a bit, and Japan has followed the path of peaceful nationhood since the end of the war, which has been highly commended by the international community," he added.

- 'Re-examine and understand' -

Tokyo and Beijing are embroiled in a series of rows, including a long-running diplomatic set-to over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Tensions rose further late last year when Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited the Yasukuni shrine, which honours Japan's war dead, including convicted war criminals.

Abe told the parliament this week he "must make more effort" to get countries such as China and South Korea to understand his pilgrimage.

Suga said Abe "meant to say that his visit was to pledge that Japan would never wage war again, that he would build a peaceful nation".

At a parliamentary committee, Suga separately said the administration would set up a team to look at the lead-up to the 1993 apology issued to "comfort women", the euphemism for those forced to work in Japanese military brothels during WWII.

"We'd like to launch a team to re-examine and understand the background (of the statement)," he said, according to Kyodo News. He did not elaborate on any plan to issue a new declaration, a move that would meet with anger from South Korea.

Some on Japan's right insist comfort women were merely common prostitutes, and that the state had nothing to do with coercion. Most respected historians dispute this view.

China and South Korea often call on Japan to "reflect" on its past, while Tokyo says its neighbours use history as a diplomatic stick to beat it with.

Japan's official position, one that has been repeatedly endorsed by successive governments, is that it inflicted grievous harm on the populations of countries it invaded, and has offered numerous apologies.

However, comments by senior right wing figures -- including those with close connections to Abe -- on the veracity of events like the Nanjing Massacre regularly undermine that stance.

The skulls, bones, and names of thousands of dead at the Nanjing massacre memorial stand as a stark demonstration of China and Japan's inability to move beyond history in their increasingly tense relationship.

Six million people a year view the skeletal remains of victims -- displayed where they fell -- of a six-week spree of killing, rape and destruction after the Japanese military entered China's then-capital on December 13, 1937.

Chinese lawmakers on Thursday made the anniversary of the massacre an official day of remembrance, along with September 3 to mark the country's victory against Japan in 1945.

The declarations were just Beijing's latest gestures in a diplomatic battle as a territorial dispute festers between the two Asian powers.

A group of nearly 40 Chinese citizens filed a lawsuit at a Beijing court on Wednesday demanding compensation from two Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi Materials Corp., for forced wartime labour.

Articles and commentaries critical of Japan are a near-daily mainstay in Chinese state media, and Beijing's foreign ministry regularly denounces Tokyo at its daily briefings.

"Japan's right-wing forces... have become troublemakers undermining regional peace and stability," spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Wednesday, when seven of the 13 questions asked concerned the neighbour in some way.

History still bears heavy on the relationship, most weightily in Nanjing.

China says 300,000 people died in the eastern city, although some respected foreign academics put the number lower. China historian Jonathan Spence estimates that 42,000 soldiers and citizens were killed and 20,000 women raped, many of whom later died.

Wang Yang was among three generations of her family, including her 13-year-old daughter, viewing the gruesome photos in the memorial hall.

"She's a little young, but she needs to understand this history," she said of her child.

- 'History must not be forgotten' -

The Nanjing memorial -- where entry is free -- has drawn comparisons to the Auschwitz concentration camp of Nazi Germany and the Hiroshima memorial for Japanese victims of the US atomic bomb.

But the authorities have also included explicitly political messages.

"Under the inspiration of patriotic enthusiasm, we should struggle unceasingly for the construction of socialism with Chinese characteristics," reads one sign.

It describes the site as a "spiritual treasure to draw historical lessons so as to sustain the goals of peace and development", but adds that it is "an important topic for the patriotic education of the common people, especially youth".

A young man touring the memorial with friends said simply: "I feel hate."

The director of the memorial, Zhu Chengshan, insisted it was not intended to whip up hostility towards the Japanese.

"We are not seeking hate, it's for historical education. We also have a theme of peace," he said.

Chinese people take issue with Japan's failure to adequately apologise for wartime atrocities and the denial by some that a massacre took place, he said.

Ties between the Asian giants turned for the worse in 2012, after Japan nationalised islands in the East China Sea it administers but which are claimed by both sides, igniting street protests across China which the normally strict authorities allowed.

In November last year, Beijing imposed an air defence identification zone (ADIZ) over the islands, which it calls Diaoyu and Tokyo refers to as Senkaku, saying it required notification from planes crossing the area.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe then made a controversial visit to the Yasukuni Shrine, which honours 14 top war criminals from World War II among the country's war dead, in December, sparking more anger from China.

The Chinese government earlier this month hosted more than 40 foreign journalists at the Nanjing memorial, granting access to a massacre survivor, so they could "see with their own eyes" evidence of Japanese atrocities, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said.

Viewing a photo of the decapitated head of a Chinese with a cigarette stuck in its mouth, supposedly as a joke by a Japanese soldier, a woman visitor said: "If Chinese people come to Nanjing, they definitely have to come here first. I feel bitter."

Some ultra-conservative Japanese politicians dispute that the atrocities occurred.

But the Japanese government points to 1995 and 2005 statements by the then-prime ministers, both of which used the phrase "heartfelt apology".

On Nanjing, Tokyo says that "the killing of a large number of noncombatants, looting and other acts occurred", and adds "it is difficult to determine" the correct number of victims.

Nanjing memorial guide Xu Jingjing believes the site can serve as a reminder. "History must not be forgotten. That is the philosophy and goal of building this museum," she said.

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