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HARBIN, March 20 (Xinhua) -- A Japanese war veteran
arrived at Zhoujiazhen Town in Harbin, capital of northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province, on Monday to help retrieve chemical weapons buried by the invading
Japanese soldiers before their surrender in World War II.
Yoshida Isao, 81, arrived here Monday morning 60
years after heleft the town as a soldier. He was accompanied by Hase Gawa
Junichi, 69, a member of a non-governmental support organization.
Yoshida Isao enlisted in the Japanese army at the age
of 15 in 1939. He arrived in Harbin for military training in June of the same
year.
He received orders to bury the chemical weapons in
August 1945,shortly before their surrender and retreat.
"We were ordered to throw the gas bombs into water
wells. After I returned to Japan, I led a normal life, but I could not forget
the sounds of the bombs when we threw them into the wells," he said.
"The sounds have been beating in my heart. I repent
what I have done. I feel I have done wrong to the Chinese people," he said.
"I wrote a letter to the Japanese media telling the
public that there are still gas bombs left in China. I hope the Japanese
government will take action to deal with the matter," he said.
"I've just now heard that most wells have been filled
in. What worries me most is that the bombs will bring more trouble to the
locals. I don't want to see mishaps that might injure civilians again if they
were to accidentally dig up the bombs in Heilongjiang," he said.
The veteran has been highly praised by the Chinese.
He has bravely spoken out and proved the burial of
gas bombs in China, said Gao Xiaoyan, an expert on Japan with the Heilongjiang
Provincial Academy of Social Sciences. Enditem |