新闻速递 发表于 2013-2-6 14:22:35

日本人屠杀韩国人照片曝光

<html><head></head><body><p>1923年,日本发生地震。日本民众开始大规模屠杀当地的华人与韩国人。<p>Jeong Seong-gil, the honorary director of Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center Museum, presented to Yonhap News Agency photos dated Sept. 1, 1923, the day that the Great Kanto Earthquake occurred. The disaster is named after the region that includes Tokyo.<br /><br />   <br />  <div style="text-align:center"><table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" width="500"><tbody><tr><td><img alt="0" border="0" src="/data/attachment/ud/2013/0205/5bef058b.jpg" /></td></tr><tr><td style="padding:0 5px"><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table></div><p><br /><br /> After the 7.9-magnitude earthquake devastated Tokyo, Yokohama and other surrounding prefectures, Japan is known to have murdered thousands of Koreans, holding them accountable for the post-quake unrest. There were rumors that Koreans poisoned wells and committed arson and robbery to take advantage of the disaster, fueling anti-Korean sentiment in Japan.<br /><br />    In one photo revealed by Jeong, dozens of corpses are on the ground, with their lower bodies exposed. Next to the remains stand men holding long sticks, which appear to be either bamboo spears or metal skewers.<br /><br />    "Japanese people even pay respect to deceased dogs with gravestones, and they wouldn't have exposed the bottom portions of their own people," Jeong said. "It's such an atrocious act of brutality that they chose only the female bodies to strip bare."<br /><br />    Jeong said the men holding the sticks appeared to be Japanese vigilantes who committed mass murders.<br /><br />    Another photo shows corpses piled up on top of each other.<br /><br />   <div style="text-align:center"><table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" width="500"><tbody><tr><td><img alt="0" border="0" src="/data/attachment/ud/2013/0205/6eb151fa.jpg" /></td></tr><tr><td style="padding:0 5px"><div> </div></td></tr></tbody></table></div><p><br /><br /> Jeong said he'd acquired these photos in Japan a few years ago and he at first decided not to make them public because they were "too gruesome and disgraceful." But Japanese officials' decision last month to remove references to the massacre from textbooks changed his mind, Jeong said.</body></html>
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