Header Ads

Human vivisection, Unit 731 : Japan never wants to hear that, account of most inhuman experiments

Unit 731: JAPAN’S UGLY AND INHUMAN ACT


WHEN YOU GO ACROSS THE ARTICLE YOU WILL BE GOING ACROSS MOST INHUMAN ACCOUNT OF WAR-CRIME AND TORTURE !
PEOPLE SAY, OLD TIMES WERE THE GOLDEN PERIOD, WHAT WAS JAPAN DOING AT TIMES OF WORLD WAR WILL SHATTER THIS BELIEF !


·         Unit 731 was a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Imperial Japanese Army that undertook lethal human experimentation during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) of World War II.
·         It was responsible for some of the most notorious war crimes carried out by Japan. Unit 731 was based at the Pingfang district of Harbin, the largest city in the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo (now Northeast China).
·         It was officially known as the Epidemic Prevention and Water Purification Department of the Kwantung Army (関東軍防疫給水部本部 Kantōgun Bōeki Kyūsuibu Honbu?). Originally set up under the Kempeitai military police of the Empire of Japan, Unit 731 was taken over and commanded until the end of the war by General Shiro Ishii, an officer in the Kwantung Army. The facility itself was built between 1934 and 1939 and officially adopted the name "Unit 731" in 1941.
·         Up to 250,000 men, women, and children —from which around 600 every year were provided by the Kempeitai—died during the human experimentation conducted by Unit 731 at the camp based in Pingfang alone, which does not include victims from other medical experimentation sites, such as Unit 100.
·           Unit 731 veterans of Japan attest that most of the victims they experimented on were Chinese, Koreans and Mongolians.
·           Almost 70% of the victims who died in the Pingfang camp were Chinese, including both civilian and military. Close to 30% of the victims were Russian. Some others were South East Asians and Pacific Islanders, at the time colonies of the Empire of Japan, and a small number of Allied prisoners of war.
·           The unit received generous support from the Japanese government up to the end of the war in 1945.
·           Instead of being tried for war crimes, the researchers involved in Unit 731 were secretly given immunity by the U.S. in exchange for the data they gathered through human experimentation.
·         Others that Soviet forces managed to arrest first were tried at the Khabarovsk War Crime Trials in 1949. Americans did not try the researchers so that the information and experience gained in bio-weapons could be co-opted into the U.S. biological warfare program, as had happened with Nazi researchers in Operation Paperclip. On 6 May 1947, Douglas MacArthur, as Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, wrote to Washington that "additional data, possibly some statements from Ishii probably can be obtained by informing Japanese involved that information will be retained in intelligence channels and will not be employed as 'War Crimes' evidence."
·         Victim accounts were then largely ignored or dismissed in the West as Communist propaganda.

Formation


Shiro Ishii, commander of Unit 731

In 1932, Surgeon General Shirō Ishii (石井四郎 Ishii Shirō), chief medical officer of the Japanese Army and protégé of Army Minister Sadao Arakiwas placed in a command of the Army Epidemic Prevention Research Laboratory (AEPRL). Ishii organized a secret research group, the "Tōgō Unit", for various chemical and biological experimentation in Manchuria.
 Ishii had proposed the creation of a Japanese biological and chemical research unit in 1930, after a two-year study trip abroad, on the grounds that Western powers were developing their own programs. One of Ishii's main supporters inside the army was Colonel Chikahiko Koizumi, who later became Japan's Health Minister from 1941 to 1945.
 Koizumi had joined a secret poison gas research committee in 1915, during World War I, when he and other Japanese army officers were impressed by the successful German use of chlorine gas at the second battle of Ypres, where the Allies suffered 15,000 casualties as a result of the chemical attack.

Activities[edit]

A special project code-named Maruta used human beings for experiments. Test subjects were gathered from the surrounding population and were sometimes referred to euphemistically as "logs" (丸太 maruta?), used in such contexts as "How many logs fell?".
The test subjects were selected to give a wide cross-section of the population and included common criminals, captured bandits and anti-Japanese partisans, political prisoners, and also people rounded up by the Kempeitai for alleged "suspicious activities".

They included infants, the elderly, and pregnant women.

·        Vivisection

·           Thousands of men, women and children interred at prisoner of war camps were subjected to vivisection, often without anesthesia and usually ending with the death of the victim.
·         Vivisections were performed on prisoners after infecting them with various diseases.
·         Researchers performed invasive surgery on prisoners, removing organs to study the effects of disease on the human body.
·           These were conducted while the patients were alive because it was feared that the decomposition process would affect the results.
·         The infected and vivisected prisoners included men, women, children, and infants, including pregnant women (impregnated by Japanese surgeons) and their infants.
·         Prisoners had limbs amputated in order to study blood loss. Those limbs that were removed were sometimes re-attached to the opposite sides of the body. Some prisoners' limbs were frozen and amputated, while others had limbs frozen, then thawed to study the effects of the resultant untreated gangrene and rotting.
·         Some prisoners had their stomachs surgically removed and the esophagus reattached to the intestines. Parts of the brain, lungs, liver, etc. were removed from some prisoners.
·         Japanese army surgeon Ken Yuasa suggests that the practice of vivisection on human subjects (mostly Chinese Communists) was widespread even outside Unit 731, estimating that at least 1,000 Japanese personnel were involved in the practice in mainland China.
·          

Germ warfare attacks

·         Prisoners were injected with inoculations of disease, disguised as vaccinations, to study their effects. To study the effects of untreated venereal diseases, male and female prisoners were deliberately infected with syphilis and gonorrhea, then studied.
·         Prisoners were also repeatedly subject to rape by guards.   NOW , THAT’S NOT A MEDICAL EXPERIMENT!
·         Plague fleas, infected clothing, and infected supplies encased in bombs were dropped on various targets. The resulting cholera, anthrax, and plague were estimated to have killed around and possibly more than 400,000 Chinese civilians. Tularemia was tested on Chinese civilians.
·         Unit 731 and its affiliated units (Unit 1644 and Unit 100 among others) were involved in research, development, and experimental deployment of epidemic-creating biowarfare weapons in assaults against the Chinese populace (both civilian and military) throughout World War II. Plague-infested fleas, bred in the laboratories of Unit 731 and Unit 1644, were spread by low-flying airplanes upon Chinese cities, coastal Ningbo in 1940, and Changde, Hunan Province, in 1941.
·         This military aerial spraying killed thousands of people with bubonic plague epidemics.

Frostbite testing


Physiologist Yoshimura Hisato conducted experiments by taking captives outside, dipping various appendages into water, and allowing the limb to freeze.
Once frozen, which testimony from a Japanese officer said "was determined after the 'frozen arms, when struck with a short stick, emitted a sound resembling that which a board gives when it is struck'", ice was chipped away and the area doused in water. The effects of different water temperatures were tested by bludgeoning the victim to determine if any areas were still frozen. Variations of these tests in more gruesome forms were performed.

Syphilis

·         Doctors orchestrated forced sex acts between infected and non infected prisoners to transmit the disease.
·         Consider the testimony of a prison guard on the subject of devising a method for transmission of syphilis between patients:
·         "Infection of venereal disease by injection was abandoned, and the researchers started forcing the prisoners into sexual acts with each other. Four or five unit members, dressed in white laboratory clothing completely cover the body with only eyes and mouth visible, handled the tests.
·         A male and female, one infected with syphilis, would be brought together in a cell and forced into sex with each other. It was made clear that anyone resisting would be shot."
·         After victims were infected, they were vivisected at different stages of infection, so that internal and external organs could be observed as the disease progressed. Testimony from multiple guards blames the female victims as being hosts of the diseases, even as they were forcibly infected.
·         Genitals of female prisoners that were infected with syphilis were called "jam filled buns" by guards.
·           A Youth Corps member deployed to train at Unit 731 recalled viewing a batch of subjects that would undergo syphilis testing: "one was a Chinese woman holding an infant, one was a White Russian woman with a daughter of four or five years of age, and the last was a White Russian woman with a boy of about six or seven."
·         The children of these women were tested in ways similar to their parents, with specific emphasis on determining how longer infection periods affected the effectiveness of treatments. In short, some children grew up inside the walls of Unit 731, infected with syphilis.

Rape and forced pregnancy


·         Female prisoners were forced to become pregnant for use in experiments. The hypothetical possibility of vertical transmission (from mother to fetus or child) of diseases, particularly syphilis, was the stated reason for the torture.
·         Fetal survival and damage to mother's reproductive organs were objects of interest. Though "a large number of babies were born in captivity" of Unit 731, there has been no account of any survivors of the facility, children included.
·         It is suspected that the children of female prisoners were killed or the pregnancies terminated.
·         While male prisoners were often used in single studies, so that the results of the experimentation on them would not be clouded by other variables, women were sometimes used in bacteriological or physiological experiments, sex experiments, and the victims of sex crimes. The testimony of a unit member that served as guard graphically demonstrates this reality:
·         "One of the former researchers I located told me that one day he had a human experiment scheduled, but there was still time to kill. So he and another unit member took the keys to the cells and opened one that housed a Chinese woman. One of the unit members raped her; the other member took the keys and opened another cell. There was a Chinese woman in there who had been used in a frostbite experiment. She had several fingers missing and her bones were black, with gangrene set in. He was about to rape her anyway, then he saw that her sex organ was festering, with pus oozing to the surface. He gave up the idea, left, and locked the door, then later went on to his experimental work."

Weapon testing

·         Human targets were used to test grenades positioned at various distances and in different positions.
·          Flame throwers were tested on humans.
·         Humans were tied to stakes and used as targets to test germ-releasing bombs, chemical weapons, and explosive bombs.

Other experiments

·         In other tests, subjects were deprived of food and water to determine the length of time until death;
·         placed into high-pressure chambers until death;
·         experimented upon to determine the relationship between temperature, burns, and human survival;
·         placed into centrifuges and spun until death;
·         injected with animal blood;
·         exposed to lethal doses ofx-rays;
·         subjected to various chemical weapons inside gas chambers;
·         injected with sea water;
·         and burned or buried alive.

Prisoners and victims

·         Despite the facility's location in Northern China, great pains were taken by organizers of the facility that its inmates represented a wide array of ethnicities.
·           Most of the prisoners of war were American.

·         Robert Peaty (1903-1988), a British Major in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps, was the senior ranking allied officer. During this time, he kept a secret diary. A copy of his entire diary exists in the NARA archives. An extract of the diary is available at the UK National Archives at Kew. He was interviewed by the Imperial War Museum in 1981, and the audio recording tape reels are in the IWM's archives.

Facilities



·         The Unit 731 complex covered six square kilometers and consisted of more than 150 buildings.
·         The design of the facilities made them hard to destroy by bombing.
·         The complex contained various factories.
·         It had around 4,500 containers to be used to raisefleas, six cauldrons to produce various chemicals,
·         and around 1,800 containers to produce biological agents.
·         Approximately 30 kg of bubonic plague bacteria could be produced in a few days.
·         Some of Unit 731's satellite facilities are in use by various Chinese industrial concerns.
·         A portion has been preserved and is open to visitors as a War Crimes Museum.


China requested DNA samples from any human remains discovered at the site. The Japanese government—which has never officially acknowledged the atrocities committed by Unit 731—rejected the request.

Destruction of evidence

·         With the coming of the Red Army in August 1945, the unit had to abandon their work in haste. The members and their families fled to Japan.
·         Ishii ordered every member of the group "to take the secret to the grave", threatening to find them if they failed, and prohibiting any of them from going into public work back in Japan. Potassium cyanide vials were issued for use in the event that the remaining personnel were captured.
·         Skeleton crews of Ishii's Japanese troops blew up the compound in the final days of the war to destroy evidence of their activities, but most were so well constructed that they survived somewhat intact.

American grant of immunity

INSPITE OF ATOMIC ATTACK ON JAPAN BY USA, THE BOTH COUNTRIES ARE SEEN TOGETHER TO HIDE DETAILS OF UNIT 731, POLITICS HARD TO UNDERSTAND !
Among the individuals in Japan after their 1945 surrender was Lieutenant Colonel Murray Sanders, who arrived in Yokohama via the American ship Sturgess in September 1945. Sanders was a highly regarded microbiologist and a member of America's military center for biological weapons. Sanders' duty was to investigate Japanese biological warfare activity.
 At the time of his arrival in Japan he had no knowledge of what Unit 731 was. Until Sanders finally threatened the Japanese with bringing communism into the picture, little information about biological warfare was being shared with the Americans.
 The Japanese wanted to avoid the Soviet legal system so the next morning after the threat Sanders received a manuscript describing Japan's involvement in biological warfare.
 Sanders took this information to General Douglas MacArthur, who was the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers responsible for rebuilding Japan during the Allied occupations.
 MacArthur struck a deal with Japanese informants—he secretly grantedimmunity to the physicians of Unit 731, including their leader, in exchange for providing America, but not the other wartime allies, with their research on biological warfare and data from human experimentation.
 American occupation authorities monitored the activities of former unit members, including reading and censoring their mail.
 The U.S. believed that the research data was valuable. The U.S. did not want other nations, particularly the Soviet Union, to acquire data on biological weapons.
 The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal heard only one reference to Japanese experiments with "poisonous serums" on Chinese civilians. This took place in August 1946 and was instigated by David Sutton, assistant to the Chinese prosecutor.
The Japanese defense counsel argued that the claim was vague and uncorroborated and it was dismissed by the tribunal president, Sir William Webb, for lack of evidence. The subject was not pursued further by Sutton, who was probably unaware of Unit 731's activities. His reference to it at the trial is believed to have been accidental.

Separate Soviet trials

RUSSIA WITHOUT USA’S SUPPORT HAS NOT BEEN ABLE TO INTERVIEN THE MATTER LEGALLY TO THE FULL
Although publicly silent on the issue at the Tokyo Trials, the Soviet Union pursued the case and prosecuted twelve top military leaders and scientists from Unit 731 and its affiliated biological-war prisons Unit 1644 in Nanjing, and Unit 100 in Changchun, in the Khabarovsk War Crime Trials. Included among those prosecuted for war crimes, including germ warfare, was General Otozō Yamada, the commander-in-chief of the million-man Kwantung Army occupying Manchuria.

Official silence under Occupation

As above, under the American occupation the members of Unit 731 and other experimental units were allowed to go free.
One graduate of Unit 1644, Masami Kitaoka, continued to do experiments on unwilling Japanese subjects from 1947 to 1956 while working for Japan's National Institute of Health Sciences. He infected prisoners with rickettsia and mental health patients with typhus.

Post-Occupation Japanese media coverage and debate[edit]

Japanese discussions of Unit 731's activity began in the 1950s, after the end of the American occupation of Japan.
 In 1952, human experiments carried out in Nagoya City Pediatric Hospital, which resulted in one death, were publicly tied to former members of Unit 731. Later in that decade, journalists suspected that the murders attributed by the government to Sadamichi Hirasawa were actually carried out by members of Unit 731. In 1958, Japanese author Shusaku Endo published the book The Sea and Poison about human experimentation, which is thought to have been based on a real incident.

Official government response in Japan

IS APOLOGY BY JAPANESE GOVERNMENT ENOUGH FOR THE PAIN OF SO MANY BRUTALLY TORTURED AND KILLED INNOCENT PEOPLE?
·         Since the end of the Allied occupation, the Japanese government has repeatedly apologized for its pre-war behavior in general, but specific apologies and indemnities are determined on the basis of bilateral determination that crimes occurred, which requires a high standard of evidence.
·         Unit 731 presents a special problem, since unlike Nazi human experimentation which the U.S. publicly condemned, the activities of Unit 731 are known to the general public only from the testimonies of willing former unit members, and testimony cannot be employed to determine indemnity in this way.
·           Japanese history textbooks usually contain references to Unit 731, but do not go into detail about allegations, in accordance with this principle.
·          Saburo Ienaga's New History of Japan included a detailed description, based on officers' testimony. The Ministry for Education attempted to remove this passage from his textbook before it was taught in public schools, on the basis that the testimony was insufficient.
·         Shamefully, The Supreme Court of Japan ruled in 1997 that the testimony was indeed sufficient and that requiring it to be removed was an illegal violation of freedom of speech.
·         In 1997, the international lawyer Kōnen Tsuchiya filed a class action suit against the Japanese government, demanding reparations for the actions of Unit 731, using evidence filed by Professor Makoto Ueda of Rikkyo University. All Japanese court levels found that the suit was baseless. No findings of fact were made about the existence of human experimentation, but the decision of the court was that reparations are determined by international treaties and not by national court cases.
·         JAPAN HAS BEEN TRYING TO REMAIN SILENT AND IGNORE THE MATTER OF UNIT 731 FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS
·         In October 2003, a member of the House of Representatives of Japan filed an inquiry. Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi responded that the Japanese government did not then possess any records related to Unit 731, but the government recognized the gravity of the matter and would publicize any records that were located in the future.


1 comment:

  1. Human Vivisection, Unit 731 : Japan Never Wants To Hear That, Account Of Most Inhuman Experiments - Daily Shout Times >>>>> Download Now

    >>>>> Download Full

    Human Vivisection, Unit 731 : Japan Never Wants To Hear That, Account Of Most Inhuman Experiments - Daily Shout Times >>>>> Download LINK

    >>>>> Download Now

    Human Vivisection, Unit 731 : Japan Never Wants To Hear That, Account Of Most Inhuman Experiments - Daily Shout Times >>>>> Download Full

    >>>>> Download LINK

    ReplyDelete

Popular Posts

Powered by Blogger.