From the BBC:
“VJ Day: Japan marks 75 years
since end of WWII”
Japan has marked 75 years since
its surrender in World War Two. Victory over Japan Day marked the end of the
conflict, four months after fighting ended in Europe. It is estimated that
there were 71,000 British and Commonwealth casualties of the war against Japan,
including more than 12,000 prisoners of war. More than 2.5 million Japanese
military personnel and civilians are also believed to have died. Commemorations
for VJ Day are being held around the world. Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
sent an offering to a controversial war shrine in Tokyo to mark the occasion,
but did not attend in person. However, two of his ministers did visit the
Yasukuni Shrine, in a move that is likely to anger China and South Korea. Fourteen
leaders who were later convicted by the Allies as war criminals are
commemorated at the shrine, which both China and South Korea view as a symbol
of Japan's military aggression during the war.
What is VJ Day? On 15 August 1945, Japanese Emperor Hirohito
addressed the nation and announced an end to the fighting. The country's
official surrender was signed on 2 September the same year. Victory in Europe
(VE) Day took place on 8 May following Germany's surrender, but the war
continued in the Asia-Pacific region for months. The end of the conflict in
Japan came days after the US dropped nuclear bombs over the cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August. More than 200,000 people are believed to have
been killed.
^ It is important for Japan to
remember its role in World War 2 the same way that it is important for Germany
to remember its role in World War 2. No matter how many years past since the
war they should not be allowed to either forget their dark past or to try and
change the past to make them out to be the victims of the war. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.