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XIANGCHENG, Henan Province, June 23 (Xinhuanet) -- At midnight on June 30th 1945, everything seemed as usual in a forced-labor camp in the northern Japanese town of Hanaoka. But suddenly, 20 well-chosen Chinese slave laborers broke into the
guard house and killed four guards with sticks and rods.
Driven by arduous labor, torture and humiliation,
about 800 Chinese laborers staged an uprising against the Hanaoka copper mine
office, which was run by Kajima Gumi, a leading Japanese engineering company.
The uprising was led by Geng Zhun, who was transported to Hanaoka after being
captured by Japanese invaders in May 1944 as a company commander from Chiang
Kai-shek's Kuomintang army.
"We didn't know the terrain near the camp except that
Hanaoka was surrounded by the sea. So the uprising was tantamount to suicide,
but we had no choice," Geng told Xinhua in his modest home in Xiangcheng county,
about 150 miles southeast of Luoyang city, where he was captured by Japanese
invaders in 1944. During the battle, a bullet hit his belly, and when he woke up
from a coma, he became a prisoner of war.
Wearing a small white goatee, Geng now turns 91 years
old. He joined the Kuomintang army in 1932 at the age of 18. He is one of the
most famous living soldiers of World War II. He is widely respected as one of
the bravest men in fighting against Japanese militarism, both in the past and in
the present.
"Our plan was to kill guards and escape to the
seaside. If there were boats, we would go to Hokkaido, a big northern Japanese
island. If we found no boats there, we would jump into the sea. Weprefer to die
like men," said Geng, who still has the dignity of a soldier.
But the plan went awry when four guards escaped and
sounded the alarm. The prisoners escaped to the nearby rugged mountains, which
were then encircled by some 20,000 military police and local villagers.
Thus began the tragedy that would become known as the
Hanaoka Incident. Only one prisoner went missing while the others, including
Geng, whose attempt to commit suicide was stopped by the Japanese, were
recaptured.
Those recaptured were taken to a square in Hanaoka
village. There they were beaten and forced to kneel for three days and three
nights on the gravel with their hands bound behind their backs. Battered and
lacking water or food under the blazing sun, more than 130 men died, Geng
recalls.
Geng, as the leader of the uprising, was among those
who were tortured by Japanese. But he survived, with a life imprisonment
sentence handed by Japanese court.
In early October 1945, almost two months after
Japan's surrender, American troops discovered the site of the Kajima camp.It was
a little bit late about 418 of the 986 Chinese slave laborers at Hanaoka had
died.
Among the 986 were soldiers like Geng, farmers,
merchants, school teachers and even teenagers. The youngest was a boy of 15.
They worked up to 15 hours a day in the freezing
winter of northern Japan, with straw sandals on their feet and little more than
buns and soup in their stomachs. Some dug trenches in frigid water to divert a
river that flowed over a valuable copper-mining operation. Others struggled up
steep slopes with 50-kg bags of cement on their backs. They had no days off.
In addition to back-breaking labor, the slave
laborers faced widespread abuse and humiliation. The beating-to-death of a
23-year-old man called Xue Tongdao by Japanese guards with a pizzle, inflamed
Chinese prisoners and ignited the revolt, says Geng.
With hard, indisputable evidence of atrocities at the
camp, an Allied war crimes tribunal in Yokohama sentenced Ise Chitoku, commander
of the Kajima camp, and two camp guards to hang in 1948.
Geng Zhun returned to China after the defeat of Japan.
Althoughhe had nightmares over his suffering in his seven-day sea voyage to
Japan, during which some Chinese died in front of him, and thenat Hanaoka, he
did nothing until 1989.
That year, about 50 survivors, including Geng, and
250 relatives of victims demanded from Kajima a formal apology, compensation and
construction of two memorials in Beijing and Hanaoka in honor of those dead.
This is the first case ever for Chinese on the mainland to fight for
compensation and apologies from a Japanese company for its wartime atrocities.
"It is a blood debt. We must fight to win
compensation for our 418 dead companions and the suffering that we all endured
there," says Geng, with a steady and calm voice. "More than that, we want people
in the world to know clearly what happened in Hanaoka."
Talks between Geng's group and the company fell apart
in 1995, however. Geng, then aged 82, and another 10 survivors, all in their
70's and 80's, had no choice but to file a lawsuit against Kajima in a Japanese
court.
The Japanese court moved slowly, as Kajima did.
Kajima could probably outwait the Chinese plaintiffs since they are very old. In
fact, one of the 11 plaintiff members died soon after the trialbegan.
In the meantime, lawyers of Geng's group began to
lose patience and persuade their plaintiffs to work out an amicable settlement
with the company. Later, Geng's group, with total trust, went further to give
carte blanche to its lawyers and returned to Chinain 1998 to await final
results.
"We thought they truly had sincerity and
responsibility, so we signed a carte blanche," says Geng. "Besides, we are so
old that we can't make too much travel between China and Japan."
Just like the uprising in 1945, the suit went awry.
Japanese lawyers on behalf of Geng's group reached an amicable settlement with
Kajima, without prior consultations with Geng's group.
The settlement, after a 13-year trial, fell far short
of expectations and requirements of Geng and the other plaintiffs. Noapology, no
compensation, or memorial. Kajima only agreed to give a sum of 500 million yen
(about 4.7 million US dollars) as a donation for China, which the company
claimed in the settlement was not for compensation.
"We have been cheated and betrayed," says Geng, who
was so angry that he fell into a three-day coma after being told the result.
Geng and the other survivors refused to sign their names on the reconciliation
settlement.
"As the chief plaintiff, I oppose such a verdict. On
this special occasion, I want to tell the world that we reserve the right to
continue our charges against Kajima," says Geng, referring to the upcoming 60th
anniversary of Hanaoka Incident.
"The result hurts me very much, particularly
regarding Kajima'srefusal to recognize the past," says Geng. "Its attitude makes
me unbearably angry."
Kajima is not the only thing that makes Geng angry.
More recently, there were worse irritants, including
Japanese leaders' continual visits to the Yasukuni shrine, Japan's attempts to
gloss over its wartime record in new school textbooks and its bid to pursue a
permanent seat in the UN Security Council.
"I feel angry to see no sincere repentance in Japan
over its wartime atrocities. Its prime minister visits the Yasukuni shrine every
year," says Geng, referring to Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
Koizumi's visits to the shrine, in Tokyo's center,
since he took office in 2001 have angered most of people in neighboring
countries, mainly China and the Republic of Korea. The Shinto sanctuary honors
2.5 million Japanese war dead, including 14 convicted Japanese war criminals.
The other thing that makes Geng feel angry is Japan's
unscrupulous endeavor to expand its military capabilities. "While denying its
wartime past, as evidenced by its distortion of history, Japan is moving to
revive militarism. That is very dangerous," says Geng.
Geng says his only wish now is to win his last battle
against Kajima in the court and oblige the company to apologize and compensate
for its past atrocities. But based on words and deeds by the Japanese
governments and companies, Geng seems to have taken an impossible mission.
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