75 years later, 1 million Japanese war dead still missing
Seventy-five years after the end of World War II,
more than 1 million Japanese war dead are scattered throughout Asia, where the
legacy of Japanese aggression still hampers recovery efforts.
The missing Japanese make up about half of the 2.4
million soldiers who died overseas during Japan’s military rampage across Asia
in the early 20th century.
They are on remote islands in the South Pacific.
They are in northern China and Mongolia. They are in Russia.
As the anniversary for the end of the Pacific War
arrives Saturday, there is little hope these remains will ever be recovered,
let alone identified and returned to grieving family members.
Only about half a million are considered
retrievable. The rest are lost in the sea or buried in areas that can't be
reached because of fighting or security or political reasons, according to
Japan's Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, which is in charge of support
measures for bereaved families.
Locating, identifying and finding places to store
the decades-old remains have been complicated as memories fade, artifacts and
documents get lost and families and relatives age.
In 2016, Japan’s parliament passed a law launching
an eight-year remains recovery initiative through 2024. It promotes more DNA
matching and cooperation with the U.S. Department of Defense in case remains
are found at U.S. military facilities on islands in the southern Pacific that
were former battlegrounds.
It was not until 2003 that the Japanese government
started DNA matching, but only at the request of possible families. In July,
Japan set up a comprehensive remains information center at the ministry that
would provide DNA testing.
After Japan’s disastrous retreats in the Pacific in
1943, the military started sending back empty boxes with stones to bereaved
families, without providing details about the deaths. Japan insisted all war
dead would be honored as gods at Yasukuni Shrine.
Similar practices were continued by postwar
governments, which didn't put an emphasis on identifying individual remains to
return to families, experts say.
Japan sent its first overseas remains collection
mission in 1952 after a seven-year U.S. occupation ended. The efforts were
unwelcome in many Asian countries that had suffered under Japanese wartime
aggression.
The government in the 1950s dispatched missions to
major former battlegrounds for the “token” collection of random remains; most
were unidentified and never returned to families. After collecting the remains
of about 10,000 war dead, the welfare ministry in 1962 tried to end the project
but was forced to continue the effort following repeated requests by veterans
and bereaved families.
The government mission has so far recovered just
340,000 remains; most are kept at Tokyo’s Chidorigafuchi national cemetery of
unknown soldiers.
They were never DNA tested or identified, and almost
certainly include a “significant number” of the remains of non-Japanese
nationals, including Koreans and Taiwanese soldiers drafted and sent overseas
to fight for the Japanese Imperial Army, said Kazufumi Hamai, a Teikyo
University historian and expert on the remains issue.
More than 240,000 Koreans fought for Japan during
the country’s 1910-1945 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula, including 20,000
believed to have died outside of mainland Japan. Some of their remains were
most likely brought back, unidentified and mixed with the Japanese collected
during past missions before being placed in Chidorigafuchi.
Japan’s delayed and insufficient remains collection
underscored the government’s failure to face up to its wartime past, Hamai
said.
“The government lacked respect for individual
remains and their dignity,” he said. “Their remains collection program was
sloppy and carried out reluctantly at the request of veterans’ families, while
completely neglecting the Koreans and Taiwanese.”
About 700 remains of Koreans have been separately
stored at a Tokyo Buddhist temple, Yutenji. Health and welfare ministry
officials say they are the only remains of the former Korean soldiers that they
are aware of. More than half of the 700 are from North Korea.
Several hundred remains had been previously returned
to their homes through diplomatic arrangement, but talks have been stalled in
recent years as diplomatic relations have soured over Japan’s wartime actions,
including the use of forced laborers and the sexual abuses of women forced to
work at frontline military brothels.
Japan gained access to Russia and Mongolia only
starting in 1991, when Japan was given a list of tens of thousands of
imprisoned Japanese soldiers and maps of the mass graves where they were
buried. About 600,000 were sent to former Soviet prisons, where 55,000 died,
including a few thousand Koreans.
Last year, a U.S. citizens’ group searching for the
remains of American war dead in the Pacific War found the remains of about 160
Asians on the island of Tarawa — called the Republic of Kiribati today. It
asked the Japanese and Korean governments to have them DNA tested.
Hamai says the case could set the stage for Japan
and South Korea cooperating to identify and return the remains to where they
belong.