UN Japan to resume remains collection in Philippines - Since 1958, the remains of only 100,000 out of 518,000 Japanese soldiers who died in the Philippines

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https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20180509_26/
https://www.rappler.com/nation/2021...triate-japanese-world-war-ii-soldiers-remains
https://www.rappler.com/views/imho/192560-japan-discomfort-history-comfort-women-statue
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Japan will resume collecting remains of Japanese soldiers who died in the Philippines during World War Two.

Japan's welfare ministry, which handles the task, says the governments of Japan and the Philippines signed a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday. The program is expected to restart by the end of March 2019.

About 520,000 Japanese soldiers died in the Philippines during the war. But roughly 370,000 sets of remains have yet to be brought back home.

Japan suspended the retrieval of the soldiers' remains in 2010. The remains of Filipinos were suspected to have been mingled among those collected and preserved.

The welfare ministry came up with measures to prevent a recurrence.

Under the measures, Philippine experts will witness the work to collect remains, and Japanese and Philippine authorities will jointly assess the bones to check if they belong to Japanese soldiers.

"This agreement will facilitate the proper collection, handling, storage, and shipment of these remains," the DFA added in its news release on Wednesday.

The DFA said around 518,000 Japanese soldiers died in the Philippines during World War II.

Since 1958 under then president Carlos P. Garcia, the Philippines has "allowed Japan to undertake recovery missions in the country for humanitarian reasons."

"Since then, the remains of 100,000 soldiers have been returned to Japan," the DFA said.

Recently, World War II issues between the Philippines and Japan came up again after a controversial comfort woman statue along Roxas Boulevard was removed.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said the statue can be placed somewhere else because "it is not the policy of government to antagonize other nations," in this case Japan, which complained about the statue.

Wartime atrocities, including comfort women forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II, continue to mire Japan’s relations with its neighbors, notably China, Korea, and the Philippines. But over time, Japan’s soft power, investments, and overseas aid softened the position of most Southeast Asian countries, including the Philippines. While surviving comfort women became national figures in Korea, their Filipina counterparts have become marginalized and Philippine authorities have become largely indifferent to their legitimate demands for an official apology and compensation from Japan.

As Japan actively seeks to become a normal power and play greater formal roles in the international system, it has to sincerely own up to its past mistakes and refrain from applying pressure on countries simply commemorating part of their history. On the part of the Philippines, good relations with Japan should not come at the expense of forgetting history and disregarding those who have suffered under Japanese occupation. Government, alongside academe, media, and civil society, has a moral responsibility to narrate correct historical facts to its people and establish and preserve monuments that honor those historical episodes.

As Jose Rizal poignantly said: "Ang hindi lumingon sa pinanggalingan ay hindi makakarating sa paroroonan (Those who do not look back from where they came from cannot reach their destination)."
 
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said the statue can be placed somewhere else because "it is not the policy of government to antagonize other nations," in this case Japan, which complained about the statue.
More evidence DU30 is a BAMF who wants to move his country forward rather than whine forever about shit from over seventy-five years ago. Every country has every right to recover their war dead, especially after so long, and if you want amends, which Japan has already made plenty, it's where you should've started in the first place.
 
It's worth noting that most Japanese soldiers who died in the war died of starvation. The Japanese high command was notoriously incompetent in regards to logistics, providing a basic rice ration and expecting soldiers to forage/loot. Of course, the USA's air/naval supremacy and their policy of not surrendering also played a role.

Lol when is the USA and Russia going to make up for what they did in WWII? Oh wait, they won the war, they good boys dey dindu nuffin

The USA provided the Marshal Plan and restructured Japan to not be shit and the USSR provided the East-Germans with good slavic genes to stop them from becoming cucked betamen.
 
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It's worth noting that most Japanese soldiers who died in the war died of starvation. The Japanese high command was notoriously incompetent in regards to logistics, providing a basic rice ration and expecting soldiers to forage/loot. Of course, the USA's air/naval supremacy and their policy of not surrendering also played a role.
Even before Japan entered World War II, Prime Minister Konoe knew Japan's military control was inefficient, especially during the shitstorm which was the Second Sino-Japanese War AND Chinese Civil War, where everybody was killing each other left and right in total anarchy (*cough* Nanking *cough*). He passed the National Mobilization Law to initiate total war, which would have made control easier, except subsequent embargo threats didn't help, and lead to the rise of Tojo and other military officials, who expected the war to be over within months.

The USA provided the Marshal Plan and restructured Japan to not be shit and the USSR provided the East-Germans with good slavic genes to stop them from becoming cucked betamen.
IDK, the left-wing FDR holdovers made the Japanese government extremely inefficient and difficult to change some shit necessary to this day. As for East Germany, the USSR just didn't create a guilt cult over the war with sexual revolution kindergartens and permanent guest workers.
 
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Lol when is the USA and Russia going to make up for what they did in WWII? Oh wait, they won the war, they good boys dey dindu nuffin

What atrocity, exactly, have they failed to own up to? Unless you're just having a laugh. In fact, lets just limit this to the US, because Russia never apologizes for shit, ever...
 
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Reactions: Marvin
What atrocity, exactly, have they failed to own up to? Unless you're just having a laugh. In fact, lets just limit this to the US, because Russia never apologizes for shit, ever...
DREEEEEEEsden!

Seriously? Why don't you look at the Nip occupation of China and the Korea's.
Let's take a look...

China:
Manchukuo_Hsinking_avenue.jpg

Korea:
keijo1.jpg

B-but some soldiers did mean stuff to Chinese civilians and Korean women were duped into being cum dumpsters, so it nullifies everything Japan left which they utilized for their own benefit as sovereign nations! But those dang Japs only did it because they wanted all the natural resources for themselves and tried to eradicated Chinese and Korean culture, never mind the fact past cultures which existed on those lands were replaced for centuries.
 
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Humans are such an awesome species that lots of our resources are consumed digging up corpses of those of our own species we murdered for no fucking reason at all.

Yay humanity!
 
Like I mentioned in another thread, the Philippines has a bit of a different perspective in regards to WWII:

https://www.filipiknow.net/common-misconceptions-about-wwii-in-the-philippines/

10 Biggest Misconceptions About World War II In The Philippines


World War II was one of the largest and deadliest conflicts in human history, claiming the lives of millions and wrecking havoc on countries’ economies throughout the world.

Truly a “world war” in scope, virtually every country participated directly or indirectly in the war. For the Philippines, its own involvement came in the form of being occupied by the Japanese for three years.

Eager to grab the country’s natural resources, the Japanese drove out the Americans and became the new masters of the archipelago. Their reign—marked by numerous accounts of atrocities—alienated majority of the Filipinos who kept on fighting for their homeland right until the Americans came back to liberate the country.

According to the famous quote, the first victim of war is usually truth, and with World War II here in our country, it’s no different. Over the years, many misconceptions have been made about certain facts, and thus it is only right to rectify them in order to set the record straight.

Note: This article in no way seeks to justify the unprovoked Japanese aggression and occupation of the Philippines but only seeks to give a clearer picture of what really happened during those dark and deplorable days.


1. Every Japanese Treated Our Countrymen Harshly.

A mother and child murdered on the streets of Manila. Source: Battling Bastards of Bataan
Probably the biggest reason why some Filipinos—especially those belonging to the older generation—still harbor feelings of hatred for the Japanese is because of the brutality they suffered under their rule. We don’t blame them; after all, it is well-documented that life was generally a living hell for those who lived under the Japanese.

Contrary to popular belief however, not all the Japanese acted like savage barbarians. In fact, there were some who actually displayed kindness towards the people. Chief Justice Abad Santos had fond memories of a Christian Japanese Captain named Watanabe who not only treated him and his son kindly, but even delivered his letter to his wife.

https://www.filipiknow.net/rare-historical-videos-philippines/
Japanese officers, especially those who knew how to speak English, and their men were quite well-behaved and would even try to befriend the local Filipino community. While it won’t erase the stigma of their compatriots’ brutality, it’s also equally wrong to classify every single Japanese as a mindless murderer.



2. They Controlled The Entire Philippines.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat...Premier Tojo & Gen. Waji-Ehk Arrive in Manila
WWII Japanese Premier Tojo & Gen. Waji-Ehk Arrive in Manila. Source: tommy japan via Flickr
While the Japanese did wrest the country from the Americans, a highly effective guerrilla force prevented them from ever taking full control of the country.

In fact, the Japanese controlled as much as only 40 percent; all the rest belonged to different guerrilla groups. While the Japanese did control the major urban centers, they were in fact confined mostly to Luzon and Visayas, surrounded by the guerrillas who operated in the countryside and in the mountains.


One guerrilla movement in Mindanao—the island farthest from the Japanese—even installed its own government which operated out in the open. These groups’ non-stop destabilization and surveillance campaign against the Japanese proved to be hugely successful, and were invaluable to the eventual return of the Americans.



3. The Guerrillas Were A United Front.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat... depicting the Philippine resistance movement
Propaganda poster depicting the Philippine resistance movement. Via Wikimedia Commons.
In a way, the different guerrilla groups were united primarily that they had to fight a common enemy. However, the cause for unity ends there as these groups hated each other almost as much as they hated the Japanese. In fact, they often fought each other either for territory and influence.


The Huks, for instance, despised American-led guerrilla groups and would often engage them in battle. The Moros also clashed with Filipino and USAFFE guerrillas on a regular basis. So in actuality, the conflict in the Philippines looked less like a clear-cut duel between two people and more like a barroom brawl among drunken customers.



4. The Guerrillas Were Composed Of Filipinos And Americans Only.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat...se Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Force or “Wah Chi”
Chinese-Filipino guerrillas with some captured Japanese soldiers in Luzon. Source: www.watawat.net
While we may think that only Filipinos and Americans fought as guerrillas against the Japanese, there was actually another nationality that fought them here too: the Chinese.

That’s right, the Chinese—being also on the receiving end of Japanese aggression during the war—formed their own guerrilla group against the invaders. Composed mainly of assimilated Chinese, the Philippine Chinese Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Force or “Wah Chi” operated in Central Luzon and often conducted lightning raids and liquidations against the Japanese and their collaborators.


They also fought together with the Huk. In fact, Luis Taruc was said to have remarked that among the guerrilla groups, the Wah Chi “were among the most courageous and ferocious.” Speaking of ferocity…



5. The Guerrillas Fought A Good, Clean Fight.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat...nd killed in the muddy water of a bomb crater
Four Japanese snipers shot and killed in the muddy water of a bomb crater (1944). Source: Wikimedia Commons.
To think that only the Japanese were brutal is misleading since various accounts have shown how creatively cruel our guerrilla forefathers could be as well. That Filipinos are an innately gentle and hospitable people just goes to show how far the Japanese actually forced them into becoming cruel sadists as well.

Fulfilling the proverb of “violence begets violence” and driven by revenge, the Filipino guerrillas struck fear into the hearts of the invaders, mutilating and decapitating captured Japanese soldiers whenever they could. One Japanese officer in Mindanao related how they would go back to sleep on their ships at night for fear of being ambushed by Moro juramentados. When the Americans finally returned, their cigarettes were often bartered with by the guerrillas using the severed heads of Japanese soldiers.


The guerrillas also often ignored American orders to treat captured enemy soldiers well, killing and decapitating them the moment they could lay their hands on them. Even the Americans themselves were frightened at the behavior and appearance of the guerrillas, some of whom vowed not to shave or cut their hair until they’ve wiped out the enemy.

Again, only by the sheer cruelty of the Japanese were the Filipinos forced to become cruel themselves.


6. The American Liberation Campaign Was Unstoppable.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat...ription=US Armada moving towards Leyte Island
US Armada moving towards Leyte Island (1944). Via Wikimedia Commons.
Believe it or not, General Douglas MacArthur almost didn’t get to keep his promise of returning to the Philippines in 1944, and it’s all thanks to some very critical mistakes the Americans made during the decisive Battle of Leyte Gulf. Luckily for them though, the Japanese made far more mistakes.

At this point, the Japanese were getting desperate and banking on a last-ditch gambit to delay or even possibly defeat the overwhelming American forces poised to land on Leyte. To do this, they consolidated what was left of their once-mighty Navy and devised a plan wherein a sacrificial decoy force would lure away the American’s most powerful ships which was guarding the invasion force. With those out of the way, the Japanese would then swoop in with their own ships and destroy the unguarded forces.


The plan, if it succeeded, would have slaughtered a countless number of American soldiers as well as set the liberation campaign schedule back by years. And it nearly worked too.

Taking the bait, the powerful main fleet led by Admiral William Halsey pursued the decoys and allowed the Japanese Navy led by Vice-Admiral Takeo Kurita to sail unopposed through the San Bernardino Strait right into the unguarded American forces off the coast of Samar. Up against this overwhelming force of battleships which included the Yamato (the largest of its kind in the world) and heavy cruisers was a motley collection of American support ships which consisted of slow-moving escort carriers, transports, and small destroyer ships.

However, the Americans displayed ferocious fighting skills in their engagement, their outgunned ships going toe-to-toe with the powerful Japanese battleships. In fact, Kurita lost his nerve and sounded the retreat because he thought he had been fighting the main American fleet.



7. MacArthur Made His “I Shall Return” Speech Here.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur wades ashore during initial landings at Leyte, Philippine Islands (1944). Via Wikimedia Commons.
With all the legends surrounding MacArthur, it’s probably no wonder if many Filipinos still think he announced his famous promise here on Philippine soil.

In reality however, MacArthur uttered that line only after he had arrived in Terowie, South Australia with the rest of the evacuees from Corregidor. He also kept repeating that line in his subsequent speeches.


Incidentally, his colleagues and officials at Washington thought MacArthur’s line was too personal and asked him to change it to “We shall return”, a request he ignored. Besides, his supporters countered, MacArthur took the war personally since he thought he had let the Filipino people down and wanted to make amends.



8. The Japanese Completely Surprised Our Forces When The War Began.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/creat...n=Victorious Japanese troops on Hearn Battery
Battle of Corregidor: Victorious Japanese troops on Hearn Battery (1942). Via Wikimedia Commons.
After the infamous attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, we were taught that the Japanese quickly launched “surprise” air raids on several bases across the Philippines.

One raid at Clark Airfield—which would be known as our own version of Pearl Harbor—resulted in the destruction of virtually the entire arsenal of USAFFE airplanes. As a consequence, the Japanese achieved air superiority at the onset of their invasion of the country.

It was a complete tactical surprise, right? Not really.

Since the attack on Pearl Harbor, USAFFE forces in the country had already been put on the alert for the impending Japanese onslaught. In fact, General Lewis Brereton, commander of the Far East Air Force even proposed sending bomber planes to destroy Japanese air bases in Formosa (Taiwan) to pre-empt their raids when he heard the news about Pearl Harbor. He also recommended that the planes be kept off the ground in order to prevent their destruction by the Japanese.


However, bureaucratic squabbling between him and MacArthur’s Chief-of-Staff General Sutherland prevented the planes from launching the operation in time, an incident which has come to be known as the “Far East Air Force Controversy.” One Japanese airman who took part in the first air raids even expressed his surprise when he saw the American planes “like sitting ducks” on the ground.

Without the much-needed planes, the Filipinos and Americans found themselves at a huge disadvantage against the Japanese.



9. The Death March Was Japanese Brutality At Its Worst.


There is no question that the infamous Bataan Death March was one of Japan’s worst atrocities committed against the Filipinos and Americans. The 60-mile trek from Mariveles, Bataan in the south to Camp O’ Donnell in the north resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of captured prisoners, many of whom succumbed to the gruelling conditions of the march.

Curiously enough, many misconceptions have been attributed to such a well-documented event. For one, some prisoners described the long walk as relatively easy. According to them, their constant rest stops was the reason why the march lasted for at least three weeks.

And aside from the numerous accounts of Japanese cruelty, there were also stories of kind Japanese soldiers who helped out the prisoners, giving them water and allowing them ample time to rest. A few even allowed the weak ones to ride with them on their jeepneys or trucks. Unfortunately, acts of kindness like the aforementioned were the exceptions rather than the norm.


Another misconception is the view that surrendered personnel from Corregidor were transferred and forced to join the Death March. On the contrary, at the time of their surrender (May 6, 1942) the last of the Death March participants had already reached Camp O’ Donnell in Tarlac, their exodus having begun after the fall of Bataan on April 9. Instead, they were shipped to Manila and paraded on the streets as the Japanese wanted to show off their victory.

The Corregidor prisoners were also in far better shape (they enjoyed better rations) than their comrades who joined the Death March at the time of their surrender.



10. Every Effect Of Japanese Occupation Was Negative.

Was there ever a positive effect of Japanese rule of the Philippines?

While a decimated population, a destroyed economy, and a wrecked infrastructure would seem to negate that notion, there were indeed a few silver linings to be had during their occupation of the country. For one, Tagalog and not English became the national language. As a result, our culture experienced a sort of renaissance during those years especially when artists and writers re-discovered the beauty of indigenous arts and literature.



As we’ve mentioned before, the presence of a foreign invader also strengthened our national identity. Even if the guerrilla groups squabbled among themselves, they at least had the propensity to recognize the Japanese as a common enemy.

Lastly, the occupation showcased the positive qualities of Filipinos who not only had to be resilient but also be extremely creative to stay alive. Conclusively, the hardships of the war definitely strengthened the Filipinos’ indomitable will to survive.
 
But those dang Japs only did it because they wanted all the natural resources for themselves and tried to eradicated Chinese and Korean culture, never mind the fact past cultures which existed on those lands were replaced for centuries.

Asia for Asians -> Mainly invade Independent Asian countries -> Only attack colonized places when starved of resources -> Test black plague on cities for good laughs.

Very odd planning.
 
Guess how many Japanese school children get told these facts?
Most, unless you're in the 0.03% of schools which use the "New History Textbook."

Asia for Asians -> Mainly invade Independent Asian countries -> Only attack colonized places when starved of resources -> Test black plague on cities for good laughs.

Very odd planning.
"Asia for Asians" was obviously propaganda, just like the premise we were entering World War II to fight for freedom, while allying with Russian communists and Chinese fascists who hated us. Also, the only "independent" country Japan invaded was Thailand, which was still a buffer state between British and French territories, and after it entered WWII.
 
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Well maybe while they're at it, them japs can recover our boys out of the Arizona!


Kidding, kidding. I'm down for them recovering some old bones, but the thought of imperial Japanese apologists is a bit too much. Those fuckers were brutal, they made the kruats look like the Swiss.
 
The Japanese take their deceased and last rites extremely seriously. Stems all the way back to Shinto and Buddhist tradition.
They didn't do a very good job of it during wartime. In the Pacific, the Japanese would typically pile all the dead bodies from a given battle into a mass crematory pit and scoop up a random handful of mixed up ashes and sand for sending home to the next of kin. Sometimes they would just send back sand. It was such a shitty, half-assed system that before going into battle, the Japanese soldiers would often mail home an envelope filled with their fingernail clippings or locks of hair so that their families would have some kind of unmixed human remains for funerary purposes.
 
Today's the day they start collecting again:

https://japantoday.com/category/nat...collecting-remains-of-war-dead-in-Philippines

Japan to resume collecting remains of war dead in Philippines
Today 06:00 am JST 2 Comments


TOKYO
Japan will resume this month a project to recover the remains of Japanese war dead in the Philippines, dispatching personnel to the Southeastern Asian country, the welfare ministry said.

The project, which has been suspended since 2010, will see a group dispatched to the Philippine main island of Luzon from Oct 9 to 17 to probe the remains discovered with items believed to have belonged to perished Japanese troops. They will also interview residents in areas where Japanese war dead were possibly buried, the ministry said.

The project was put on hold due to the possibility that bones other than those of Japanese nationals were mistakenly collected, but the governments of Japan and the Philippines signed a memorandum of understanding in May to resume the project.

Japan will send another group to receive the remains of the war dead, once they are verified through DNA analysis.

According to the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry, about 370,000 sets of remains of Japanese troops who died in the Philippines during World War II are still there, and aging family members of the war dead are hoping for an early resumption of the project.

In 2011, the ministry said in a report that of 311 sets of remains stored in the Philippines, samples taken from 130 have been examined, and just five appeared to be those of Japanese nationals. They were not able to extract DNA samples from 20 sets.

The ministry also received a report the following year from experts who examined DNA contained in the rest of 181 sets of remains that they were unlikely to be those of Japanese nationals.

© KYODO
 
Lol when is the USA and Russia going to make up for what they did in WWII? Oh wait, they won the war, they good boys dey dindu nuffin
Why would USA make amends for two A-bombs on B-list cities in Japan? As a nation Japan was literally blown 100 years into its future, it was a massive catch-up & they were thankful for it.
 
Japan lost more people on those islands than the US lost in the entire war. It's honestly saddening that ancient samurai dedication to honor has fallen by the wayside for a culture which collectively jacks off to cartoon 12-year-old girls with cat ears.
 
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