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History
See other History Articles

Title: Japan checks story of lost soldiers
Source: The Austrailian
URL Source: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.a ... 5744,15427258%255E1702,00.html
Published: May 27, 2005
Author: Edwin Espejo
Post Date: 2005-05-27 07:52:18 by Eoghan
Keywords: soldiers, checks, Japan
Views: 54
Comments: 3

JAPAN is checking reports that at least two elderly Japanese men found on a Philippines island are soldiers left behind from World War II who are unaware of Tokyo's surrender.

Japanese diplomats flew to General Santos city, 1300km south of Manila, to meet two men in their 80s who were said to be living in fear of being executed for deserting the now defunct imperial army.

"What a surprise it would be if it's true," Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said.

Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura said the embassy in Manila received information that "two men believed to be former Japanese soldiers are alive".

The welfare and labor ministry, which handles veterans' affairs, said it had heard from Japanese people in Mindanao about four possible former soldiers on the lawless island of Mindanao who wanted to return to Japan.

Japan's consul general in Manila, Akio Egawa, said the diplomats would interview the pair to confirm if they were soldiers from World War II.

"It is an incredible story if it is true," he said.

Yoshihiko Terashima, 86, who heads a council of Japanese war veterans' associations, said he spoke last year to a Filipina logger whose husband was Japanese and reported running into two lost former soldiers.

"The men told the woman: We may be court-martialed and executed by firing squad if we return to Japan," Mr Terashima said.

The comment would indicate the men have no idea the once-ruthless imperial army has been defunct for six decades and Japan officially no longer has a military.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda, the Government spokesman, said the two men had a go-between who apparently feared what would happen if the recluses suddenly saw a mass of journalists.

But a senior Filipino police intelligence officer in the area cautioned that the story was yet to be confirmed.

"There is a possibility that this could just be a hoax," the office said.

"Somebody may just want to gain something."

Mindanao, an island of dense jungle, has witnessed more than two decades of Islamic insurgency.

Japanese media reports said the pair had been living in guerrilla-controlled mountains near sprawling General Santos.

A former soldier who served in the unit in which the men were reported to have served said he had heard from other veterans that one of them had been telling residents in Mindanao that his family name was Sakurai.

"In October or November, I heard local residents went into the mountains and met the man, who said 'My name is Sakurai, I am a Japanese,"' Goichi Ichikawa, 89, said in Japan.

"The man apparently said he wanted to go home, but was worried."

Kyodo News agency, citing Japanese Government sources, identified the two men as Yoshio Yamakawa, 87, and Tsuzuki Nakauchi, 85.

The Sankei Shimbun daily said the men were believed to belong to the "panther division".

About 80 per cent of the division's members died or went missing while battling US forces.

Japan attacked the Philippines, then a US colony, hours after its 1941 air raid on Pearl Harbor, and formed a puppet government of Filipino oligarchs. The occupation was brutal. About one million Filipinos are estimated to have died. Filipina women were sexually enslaved.

Japan was stunned in 1974 when former imperial Japanese army intelligence officer Hiroo Onoda was found living in the jungle on the Philippine island of Lubang. He did not know of Japan's surrender 29 years earlier.

After being repatriated, Mr Onoda emigrated to Brazil.

Another former Japanese soldier, Shoichi Yokoi, was found on Guam in 1972. He returned home and died in 1997.

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#1. To: Eoghan (#0)

Japan was stunned in 1974 when former imperial Japanese army intelligence officer Hiroo Onoda was found living in the jungle on the Philippine island of Lubang. He did not know of Japan's surrender 29 years earlier.

After being repatriated, Mr Onoda emigrated to Brazil.

Another former Japanese soldier, Shoichi Yokoi, was found on Guam in 1972. He returned home and died in 1997.

I vaguely remember these stories. But, today, where could you live and not know WWII is over?

robin  posted on  2005-05-27   9:03:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: robin (#1)

where could you live and not know WWII is over?

Don't know, by folks will find them interesting during WWIII...

Eoghan  posted on  2005-05-27   9:11:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Eoghan (#0)

Gilligan's Island ran into trouble with a Japanese soldier who didn't know the war was over. But that was 40 years ago.

MUDDOG  posted on  2005-05-27   13:09:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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