China publicizes confessions by Japanese war criminals

2015-08-11 19:32:56
 

 
Photo released on Aug. 11, 2015 by the State Archives Administration of China on its website shows an excerpt from Japanese war criminal Kenzo Sugishita's handwritten confession. A total of 31 confessions from Japanese war criminals will be published online starting Tuesday by China's State Archives Administration to expose crimes committed by Japan in China during World War II. The first in the series features a confession by Kenzo Sugishita, who was born in 1901 and joined the Japanese War of Aggression against China in 1932. The first in the series features a confession by Kenzo Sugishita, who was born in 1901 and joined the Japanese War of Aggression against China in 1932. On Feb. 3, 1932, at a village about eight kilometers south of Tianle Temple in Shanghai, the squadron gave the instruction to shoot all on sight, resulting in the killing of an estimated 30 Chinese people, Kenzo Sugishita said in the confession. "On Feb. 19, 1932, I caught a child of about six years old escaping from the fire at Lujia Bridge, laid him on a stone in front of the door, beat him to death with stones, and threw the dead body into the burning house," he added. (Xinhua)

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