China raps rewrite of Japan past
6/4/2005 10:25
China has condemned Japan's official adoption yesterday of new history
textbooks which Chinese scholars say distort the Japanese invasion of China and
atrocities committed by Japanese troops. Qiao Zonghuai, a senior Foreign
Ministry official, summoned the Japanese ambassador to China, Koreshige Anami,
in Beijing yesterday afternoon. Qiao lodged a solemn representation over
approval of the textbooks "denying historical facts and beautifying
invasion." "The textbooks will be vehemently condemned by people from all
Asian countries victimized by Japan, including the Chinese," said Qiao, who
demanded the Japanese government honor its commitments regarding history and
called for urgent measures to offset the bad impacts of the adoption of the
books. The Foreign Ministry said China's ambassador to Japan, Wang Yi,
delivered a representation over the textbooks to the Japanese government in
Tokyo yesterday afternoon. Chinese people from all walks of life yesterday
challenged the Japanese way of treating history from various
perspectives. "The just-approved textbooks will disrupt the international
order and seriously undermine the confidence of Japan's Asian neighbors in
regional peace and security," said Wang Xuan, a Chinese activist leading a legal
group to help World War II victims suing Japan for damage inflicted by germ
warfare. "It is even more ridiculous that the textbooks hold China
accountable for the war," Wang said. "How could it be possible for a country to
invite an invader or start a war on its own land?" Chinese historians in
Beijing said that though about 120 revisions had been made before the textbooks
got official approval, "their nature of denying historical facts and beautifying
invasion remains unchanged." They cited as a deliberate distortion of history
the total oblivion or ambiguous narration of the Nanjing Massacre in December
1937, when Japanese troops slaughtered more than 300,000 civilians and
unarmed soldiers after taking the then Chinese capital. Only five of
the eight new textbooks mention the "Nanjing incident," and only one mentions
"there are allegedly more than 200,000 victims," adding "there are various
allegations about the number of Chinese victims." "The existence of the
tragic massacre is an indisputable fact and has been repeatedly proved by
ever-increasing historical evidence," said Zhu Chengshan, director of the
Nanjing Massacre Memorial in Jiangsu Province. By denying the existence of
the Nanjing Massacre, the new textbooks have "tampered with historical facts to
whitewash Japan's wartime atrocities," Zhu said. Adoption of the new
textbooks could also fuel a spontaneous campaign by the Chinese public to block
Japan gaining a permanent seat in the United Nations Security
Council. Fearing Japan's successful bid for the permanent seat would lead to
the revival of its aggressive, militarist past, more than 10 million Chinese
have signed an online petition to oppose Japan's move since UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan spoke in favor of Japan's entry on March 21. Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a routine press conference yesterday afternoon
that "the textbook issue largely decides whether Japan can appropriately treat
its militaristic history and instill its young citizens with a right perception
of history." Qin called on the Chinese public to express their sentiments "in
a reasonable way," and pledged China would protect the life and property of
Japanese citizens and ensure the normal operation of Japanese ventures in
China.
Xinhua news
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