Details on Japanese WWII research Unit 731 revealed

APD NEWS

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The names of over 3,600 members of Unit 731 have been disclosed by the National Archives of Japan. This was a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Japanese Army that conducted experiments on live humans during the Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.

Every day, people from all parts of China come to the 9.18 museum in Shenyang, a city of northeastern China's Liaoning Province, to look back in history. The Sept. 18, or Mukden Incident, was when Japan staged a Chinese dissident bombing, and marks the beginning of the Japanese invasion of China.

During Japan's occupation of northeast China, Unit 731 was set up in Harbin. It conducted vivisection experiments on live humans. Their ultimate goal was to develop Japan's biological warfare program.

After the war, the Japanese government did very little to acknowledge Unit 731's atrocities, despite a large amount of evidence discovered at the site.

With this latest disclosure by the National Archives of Japan, almost all the real names of the unit's members have been unveiled. The move indicates more Japanese people are choosing not to stay silent on the unit's activities.

When Japan surrendered in 1945, Unit 731 destroyed most of the evidence of its crimes. However, that has not stopped people seeking the truth: A Chinese movie about the unit started shooting this year.

“For our generation, as a movie director and a storyteller, we have to do something to prevent people from forgetting what really happened in the past," Zhao Linshan, director of the movie "731", told CGTN.

Now with the release of names of Unit 731 members, people can see for themselves evidence of one of the darkest periods in human history.

The horrific activities of Unit 731 remained one the most closely guarded secrets of World War II, as more than 300,000 people across China were killed by Japan's biological weapons, according to research. The disclosure by the National Archives of Japan could lead to further investigations on the country's wartime crime.

(CGTN)