Japanese war criminal confesses to slaughtering Chinese civilians

2015-09-09 20:23:09

CHINA-WWII-JAPANESE WAR CRIMINALS-WRITTEN CONFESSION-RELEASE (CN)
 

Photo released on Sept. 9, 2015 by the State Archives Administration of China (SAA) on its website shows the Chinese version of an excerpt from Japanese war criminal Kazuto Tsukamoto's written confession. Tsukamoto, who was born in 1919, joined the Japanese army in 1939 and was captured in China in August 1945. In the document, Tsukamoto wrote that he and other soldiers descended on Dangyang County in Hubei on Dec. 25, 1943 and carried out murder, arson and looting. About 100 villagers, including newborns, children, the elderly and pregnant women, were set on fire, bayoneted, shot and their heads "broken in two with stone," he wrote. In July 1942, Tsukamoto raped a woman while holding her at knife point, after he found the 20-year-old hiding under a bed in Jiangshan County, Zhejiang Province. The war criminal also said he "bloated 12 underground operatives with water during interrogation, trampled on their bodies and dripped hot wax oil over their naked bodies", in Dangyang County, Hubei, in November 1944. "Japanese soldiers slashed to death 11 operatives and shot the other in the chest with a handgun before beheading him with a katana," he said in the confession. The shocking admission is the 30th in a series of 31 handwritten confessions from Japanese war criminals being released online by the archives as China marks the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII. (Xinhua)

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