For the first time in nearly sixty years Yoshio
Shinozuka is going to China returning to the
ever do.
During the Second World War, Shinozuka was
scene of his crimes.
Our unit did things no human being should
ever do.
During the Second World War, Shinozuka was
part of a top secret Japanese army unit that
committed some of the worst atrocities in
modern history.
When I think of the people who I killed so
cruelly, and those who fell ill because of
the germs I produced, I cannot help apologising
to them.
Few people outside China have ever heard of
Harbin -- and yet it should have the same
Few people outside China have ever heard of
Harbin -- and yet it should have the same
connotations as the Nazi death camps.
Today, it is a thriving industrial centre.
In the 1930s, when Japan occupied China, it
became the headquarters of Unit 731 -- home
to the world's largest biological weapons
research complex.
At the end of the war, the retreating Japanese
destroyed most of evidence, but some buildings
remain.
I came here to Harbin in May, 1939. We were
given various orders. The one I can remember
clearly even now was 'don't look, don't listen,
and most importantly of all, don't tell anyone
what happens here'.
What happened was that Unit 731 perfected
the art of germ warfare. Under the command
of this man, General Shiro Ishii, Japan's
brightest scientists bred cholera, anthrax
and other deadly diseases. These pits once
housed thousands of rats. They were used to
cultivate bubonic plague.
The worst horrors were reserved for this place.
Thousands of prisoners were deliberately infected
with disease. The doctors took careful notes
-- this was, after all, a scientific exercise.
After the victims became sick, they were cut
open while still alive. The doctors wanted
to chart the course of the infection. Shinozuka
is still haunted by his first vivisection.
There was a dissecting table, which was covered
with tiles. The human guinea pig, who was
to die, was over there, being carried by a
special team.
The victim was not given any anaesthetic in
case it affected the germs. Shinazuka, who
had no medical training, prepared the body.
My legs were shaking at first and I didn't
really know what I was doing. I think I closed
my eyes. I used a brush and water to scrub
his body.
The leaders of Unit 731 wanted to cover up
The leaders of Unit 731 wanted to cover up
what was happening here. They told the locals
this was a disease prevention and water purification
plant -- when of course it was nothing of
sort. The prisoners themselves were called
'logs', a reference to their subhuman nature,
and to the timber yard next door, where 'logs'
were chopped up. We'd ask each other, 'How
many logs did you chop today?'
People would answer, 'Two logs were cut at
my section', or 'No logs were cut at my section'.
Unit 731's work was not confined to Harbin.
The diseases developed there were deliberately
spread across China. As many as one quarter
of a million people died.
The ghosts of that terrible past haunt the
present. These people still remembers the
day the Japanese planes flew over their village.
Not long after, everyone started falling sick.
Soon after that, they began to die.
Man: In that family three generations were
lost -- great grandmother, grandmother, grandson,
the pregnant daughter in law and her baby
-- five people died.
The disease was cholera -- the villagers thought
it was a curse from God.
Zhang Wenzheng's father was one of the victims.
By the time he died, there were no adults
left to carry the coffin.
I was just 14 years old, and all I could do
was cry. Those who died, died very terrible
deaths. You could hear them screaming loudly.
They suffered terrible cramps and diarrhoea
-- they were in agony.
The men and women of this man's village developed
terrible sores on their bodies.Liu Mushui
was infected, but survived -- he still bears
the scars.
Liu: I have tried to fix my leg for so long,
but it has never healed. It has cost me a
lot of money. I will show you. Take a look
-- see how bad they are? It is very bad. If
I had money, I would be able to get it cut
off with a knife.
Some of those who survived the Unit's actions
and the relatives of those who didn't have
gathered to demand justice.
They want an apology and compensation.
In 1995, the Japanese government finally issued
a general apology for the war, but it's yet
to even admit that Unit 731 existed.
We must fight -- we must. The Japanese government
must compensate us!
The villagers are led by this woman -- Wang
Xian. She lost her uncle, and one third of
her village, to the germs.A terrible death.
It's like the end of the world.
There was a young woman, about 20 year old,
was vivisected in this temple behind me, and
the villagers still remember her screams.
She said, "I'm not dead yet, don't cut me
open!"
Now, for the first time, a member of Unit
731 has returned to the scene of the suffering.
This time, though, Yoshio Shinozuka is armed
only with an apology.
Looking at your faces, I am deeply sorry for
what I did. I committed such atrocities. I
realise that simply bowing my head and saying
sorry is not enough to earn your forgiveness.
It's the first time these people have heard
It's the first time these people have heard
a Japanese apology -- and it means a lot.
I think he is a hero. I'm probably the first
person in the world to say it. I'm proud of
him.
I think Japan should be proud of Shinozuka.
He's just an ordinary Japanese man -- you
know, he was enlisted when he was a child.
He didn't know anything. He tried to serve
his country, but see the trauma he has had
post-war.
A hero in China, perhaps -- but not back here
in his homeland. Other members of 731 consider
Shinozuka a traitor, brainwashed by the Chinese
authorities. They still maintain their Unit
was a force for good -- and have no sympathy
for the prisoners who were vivisected.
From Japan's point of view, they were criminals
who had been sentenced to death. We were merely
acting as the executioners.
Toshimi Mizobuchi used to teach 731's recruits.
He now leads a comfortable life in Kobe, and
organises the Unit's annual reunion.When the
war was lost, Mizobuchi was given the job
of destroying the evidence -- including leftover
prisoners.
The rooms that we kept the logs in were closed
up tightly. Usually we sent air through pipes
into the room -- but instead, methane gas
was pumped in. They all choked to death.
As many as twelve thousand human guinea pigs
died at Harbin... but from this member of
Unit 731, there's no apology... and no remorse.
I am proud of what we did. If I was younger
I'd consider doing it all again, because it
was an interesting Unit.
Japan has a selective and subjective approach
to its military past. They say the victors
write history, but that's not always true.
Japan lost the war, but -- more than half
a century on -- is still manufacturing its
own version of it -- a fiction the United
States has been happy to endorse.
The Yasakuni shrine honours the two and a
half million Japanese who have died fighting
for their country -- including convicted war
criminals. Each year, on the anniversary of
Japan's defeat in world war two, thousands
come to pay their respects. As far as these
people are concerned, Japan has nothing to
apologise for.
All lies! China is the one who did bad things.
If Japan did not exist in Asia, China would
have been divided up by the West like Africa
was.
Keihachiro Shimizu is a professor at a respected
University. He's convinced Unit 731 never
existed.
It is all nonsense. The same thing happened
with the so-called 'Nanjing Massacre' -- the
Chinese pay people to say things. In 50-100
years time you will know the truth of history.
The Japanese race has never done bad things.
That is why we have become such a strong country
now.
In China, children are taught about 731 in
gruesome detail.The main building of the Unit's
headquarters in Harbin has been turned into
a museum. 150,000 people visit each year.
Unit 731 was very cruel.
They did not have any sense of humanity at
all. They did not treat men, women or children
as human beings. They treated them as animals.
Japanese children are given a very different
version of history. Few of these students
have even heard of Unit 731. Pupils are taught
virtually nothing about the Second World War.
Most teachers leave the subject out of class
altogether, saying they don't have time to
cover it.
There is an ambiguous atmosphere and a consciousness
that we should not refer to the war or the
Emperor's role in it. It is taboo in Japan. Because of that, there
are no questions about the war in University
entrance exams, and so it is unnecessary to
teach it in high school.
Many school textbooks present Japan as a liberator,
rather than invader -- a victim not an aggressor.f
the Ministry of Education had their druthers,
it would be an orchestrated collective amnesia
--
in terms of the textbook screening process,
they have presided over a long-term whitewashing
of Japan's past, particularly the shared past
with Asia. I think there has been in the past,
a tendency to sweep the unpleasant past under
the national tatami mat.
This is the public face of Japanese denial
-- an ultra nationalist group prowling the
streets of Tokyo. There are more than 900
groups like this one. They're well organised
and well connected -- with ties to the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party, or LDP.
Don't be deceived by foolish left-wing teachers
and Marxist foreigners teaching anti-Japanese
sentiment and advocating a dark and self-tormenting
view of history.
An increasing number of Japanese are questioning
the country's past, but for the government
the issue is taboo. It remains captive to
a nationalist constituency.
It's not like in France, Germany or Great
Britain where the ultra-nationalists are out
of the mainstream political debate. They are
part of the mainstream.
Japan's denial is extraordinary, but so is
the overseas reaction. If the German government
refused to acknowledge the holocaust, there'd
be international outrage. When Tokyo does
something similar with Unit 731, though, there's
barely a murmur outside Asia. One reason is
that United States did a dirty deal that makes its
crusade against biological weapons in Iraq
look ironic, to say the least.
Tokyo, 1946 -- and with the war over, the
war crimes trials began.None of Unit 731's
None of Unit 731's leaders were charged with any crime.
The Americans
saw to that.They wanted this -- Japan's warfare
data -- and did a secret deal with General
Ishii to get it. With the Cold War underway,
Washington was terrified the research would
fall into Soviet hands.
This was the first time scientists could get
access to human guinea pigs subjected to various
germs and various medical experiments, so
the Americans offered immunity because they
wanted unique access to all of this data,
and the Japanese don't want to talk about
this shaming past, so you can understand,
in a sense, how both countries didn't really
have any interest and any incentive to deal
with this particular aspect.
The leaders of the Unit returned to Japan
as heroes. Their careers flourished -- and
a memorial was erected in their honour.Some
of them became big shots of medical society
in Japan. Some of them were presidents of
top universities in Japan and the dean of
top medical schools in Japan and one even
became the chief censor of textbooks of the
ministry of education.
And so, sixty years after Unit 731 committed
its horrific crimes, a Japanese man and a
Chinese woman are still fighting. One for
justice... the other, for redemption.
