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NANJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Invading Japanese troops
set up 60 germ warfare units from 1932 to 1945 in China and victimized at
least 270,000 Chinese civilians, a Chinese woman professor said.
During the World War II, Japanese aggressors sent special germ warfare units and installed research and
production center for germ weapons in China, said Wang Xuan, a Chinese professor
leadinga legal group to assist World War II victims suing Japan for damages
inflicted by its germ warfare.
Japanese troops even used germ weapons against
Chinese civilians in battles and released plague, anthracnose and glanderson
Chinese mountains, forests, rivers and fields, victimizing thousands of Chinese
people, the professor said.
She made the remarks at an international workshop on
the Holocaust and the Nanjing Massacre held on Tuesday in Nanjing, capital of
east China's Jiangsu Province.
"However, such brutal and evil crimes committed by
the the Japanese invading troops such as bacteria experiments on human bodies
and germ warfare are still rarely known to the world today," she said.
"The invading Japanese troops even used germ warfare
in all battlefields in China, though the use of germ weapons in wars is very
uncommon worldwide," she said.
According to the research by Wang and other scholars,
Japanese troops set up the first germ warfare experimental unit in 1932 in
Beiyinhe, a district of Wuchang County in northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province.
In accordance with a secret order from the Japanese
emperor, theinvading troops established the notorious Unit 731 in Harbin in 1936
to develop and produce germ weapons based on bacteria experiments on human
bodies.
Following the establishment of Unit 731, germ warfare
units were set up in succession in China's major cities from north to south
including Changchun, Nanjing, Beijing and Guangzhou.
With altogether 60 units and branches across China,
germ warfare divisions involved more than 10,000 troops. In 1945 when the war
ended, Unit 731 still had more than 3,000 staff members.
Unit 731 in Harbin and Unit 100 in Changchun
manufactured a great amount of plague and glanders during the war, Wang said.
Unit 731 could produce approximately 600 kilograms of
anthracnose bacteria in one month alone, while Unit 100 manufactured 100
kilograms of anthracnose bacteria and more than 500 kilograms of glanders
bacteria between 1941 and 1942.
Research show that the invading Japanese troops
started their germ warfare as early as in 1938.
The after-war investigations indicated that the
Japanese troopswaged germ war in more than 20 Chinese provinces. East China's
Zhejiang Province and Jiangxi Province and central China's Hunan Province were
among most afflicted areas.
Six decades after the war, the Japanese government
still refuses to compensate the Chinese victims .
In July this year, the Tokyo High Court rejected
appeals by180 Chinese demanding compensation for damage caused by Japan'sWorld
War II germ warfare program.
Upholding a lower court verdict, the Tokyo High Court
acknowledged damage was caused by Japan's germ warfare in China, but ruled that
the Japanese government is not responsible for compensating Chinese victims.
Wang, the plaintiff group leader, called on all
social circles to show concern and support about the war victims physically and
mentally.
"(Popular support) is the most direct counterpunch
against Japan's denial of its germ warfare and aggression against China," she
said.
"The truth of history cannot be blotted out," she
added. Enditem |