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FUSHUN, Liaoning Province, Sept. 16 (Xinhuanet) --
More than 1,000 people from all walks of life held a public memorial ceremony
for Chinese compatriots killed in the Pingdingshan Tragedy 73 years ago in
Fushun City, northeast China's Liaoning Province, on Friday.
Holding banners reading "Never
forget national humiliation and rejuvenating the Chinese nation", and "Past
experience, if not forgotten, is a guide for the future", people laid baskets of
flowers in front of the monument to the people killed in the massacre and stood
in silence to mourn the dead at the Memorial Hall of Pingdingshan Tragedy
Victims.
The Pingdingshan Tragedy refers to the massacre of
more than 3,000 innocent Chinese people at Pingdingshan Village by invading
Japanese troops on September 16, 1932. These victims included elders, women and
children. Japanese soldiers burnt the bodies of the villagers and blew up a hill
to bury the bodies for the purpose of covering up their crimes. Japanese
soldiers also burnt more than 800 houses in the village.
"That day, September 16 of 1932, was Mid-Autumn
Festival, a traditional Chinese festival of reunion," recalled 82-year-old Yang
Yufen, a massacre survivor. "Japanese soldiers drove villagers to the cattle
house, saying to take photos of the villagers in the morning."
"But what was covered under the black cloth was not
cameras, but machine guns. As soon as they took off the black cloth, Janpanese
soldiers began shooting the innocent Chinese and they also used bayonets to
check whether there were people still alive," Yang said.
"I survived thanks to my parents' protection, but 18
members of my family died," Yang said, tears rolling down her wrinkled face.
Yang Baoshan, another survivor of the massacre, said
"I come to the memorial hall every year to mourn my family members and fellow
villagers who died in the massacre."
Yang is one of the few survivors who have kept filing
lawsuits at Japanese courts starting in 1996. They asked the Japanese government
to make a formal recognition of the crime by Japanese troops at Pingdingshan and
an apology for it, and pay 60 million yen (about 600,000 US dollars) in
compensation.
The Japanese courts admitted the facts, but rejected
the apology and compensation claims. Upholding a verdict made by a subordinate
court in 2002, the Tokyo High Court ruled the Japanese government is immune from
taking responsibility for damage inflicted before the enactment of the state
compensation law. The ruling also said that international laws do not recognize
the seeking of damage compensation by individuals.
The Tokyo High Court on May 13 again rejected
compensation claims from the Chinese plaintiffs, although the court recognized
the massacre did exist.
"I'll continue my appeal for official apology from
the Japanese government," Yang said, "If I can't win the lawsuit at Japanese
courts, I'll appeal to the World Court."
The siren was sounded for one minute in the whole
city of Fushun Friday, reminding people to keep history in mind and cherish
today's peace.
Zhou Zhongxuan, secretary of the Fushun City
Committee of the Chinese Communist Party of China, said, "I warn those people
who deny and cover up the truth of history: Respecting history, they will be
respected by history; Denying history, they will be denied by history."
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