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China condemns Japanese city’s kamikaze letter plan

Over 200 World War Two veterans, patriots from at home and abroad, foreign friends and their relatives unveiled the monument and signed the Beijing Peace Declaration on September 2/AFP

Over 200 World War Two veterans, patriots from at home and abroad, foreign friends and their relatives unveiled the monument and signed the Beijing Peace Declaration on September 2/AFP

BEIJING, Feb 10 – China expressed outrage Monday at a proposal by a Japanese city to list letters written by World War II suicide pilots on a United Nations register alongside Anne Frank’s diary.

Minami Kyushu last week filed an application to include the Japanese kamikaze pilots’ farewell letters on a Unesco world memory list, media including public broadcaster NHK have reported.

The museum wants to win registration in 2015, “to forever hand down the letters to generations to come as a treasure of human life”, it says on its website.

Among documents on the Unesco register is the diary of Anne Frank, written by the Jewish girl who hid in Amsterdam with her family in an attempt to avoid Nazi deportation. She died at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp in Germany in 1945.

“This is an effort to beautify Japan’s history of militaristic aggression, and challenge the victory of the World Anti Fascist War and the postwar international order,” Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said when asked about the letters.

Speaking at a regular press briefing, she added that Japan committed “numerous” crimes against humanity during World War II.

“This effort runs completely counter to UNESCO’s objective of upholding world peace, and will inevitably meet strong condemnation and resolute opposition from the international community,” she said.

Relations between Beijing and Tokyo are heavily coloured by history, particularly the rampage across China by Japan’s imperial forces in the 1930s and 1940s, when Chinese government researchers say 20.6 million people were killed.

Tensions have escalated amid a heightened row over disputed islands controlled by Japan but claimed by China and the visit in December by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to a Tokyo shrine commemorating Japan’s war dead, including 14 senior officials convicted of war crimes after World War II.

The kamikaze letters are included in thousands of items kept at the Chiran Peace Museum in Minami Kyushu, left behind by 1,036 pilots who died in suicidal attacks on enemies in the final years of World War II.

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The small town of Chiran is known as the place from which kamikaze planes would depart on their flight of no return.

Unesco’s Memory of the World Programme was established in 1992 to preserve global documentary heritage.

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