No way out of shadow of war if Tokyo continues its right-leaning path

Source:Xinhua Published: 2014-10-21 17:48:01

Some 110 Japanese lawmakers on Friday paid autumn tribute to the notorious war criminal-honoring Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, in a flagrant challenge to international justice and in disregard of concerns and opposition from the international community. The tribute was yet another move by right-leaning Japanese politicians to tear off war scars and get on the nerves of the victims of Japan's brutal aggression in WWII.

Earlier in the day, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also dedicated a "masakaki" tree offering in his role as "prime minister" to the shrine.

It is absurd to hear lawmaker Hidehisa Otsuji, who led the group to the shrine, say that offering "gratitude" to the people who sacrificed their lives for the country is "natural," since those they were honoring include war criminals whose hands were covered with the blood of innocent people in countries invaded by Japan during WWII.

The Yasukuni Shrine, built in 1869 under Emperor Meiji, highlights Japan's wartime nationalism and is regarded as a spiritual symbol of Japanese aggression in WWII.

Of the 2,466,532 people contained in the shrine's Book of Souls, 1,068 were convicted of war crimes by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East. Of those, 14 are convicted Class-A war criminals.

In China alone, 35 million lives were lost and huge material losses were caused during the Japanese invasion of China (1937-45). After China's city of Nanjing was occupied by Japanese troops on December 13, 1937, at least 300,000 Chinese were killed, with more than 20,000 women raped, over the course of six weeks by barbarian Japanese soldiers.

The Japanese politicians' show of so-called homage to the deceased, which has become customary at the annual spring and fall festivals of the Yasukuni Shrine and on the war anniversary on August 15, has become an insult to all nations victimized by the war of aggression, and deserves a strong answer back.

This is also a flagrant challenge to international postwar justice and human conscience, which has given Japan's neighbors and the rest of the international community every reason to be highly vigilant and deeply concerned over the path Japan is taking.

If Japan really wants to mend fences with its neighbors, it should start from reflecting on history and sincerely correcting all its wrongdoing. Otherwise, there will be no way out of the shadow of war.

This is a commentary from the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn

Posted in: Viewpoint

blog comments powered by Disqus