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Japanese Atrocities on Taiwan During WW II Recently Come to Light.
. .
In a letter received
last fall, we learned of further atrocities committed against prisoners
of war on Taiwan by the Japanese in the closing days of the war.
We received a letter from Mr.
Charles D. Parker of Florida, USA asking for assistance in finding
more information on his brother who had been executed by the Japanese
in Taihoku in June 1945. This was the first time we had heard anything
about other POWs being executed. To our knowledge there were only
the two POWs who had tried to escape from the Taichu Camp that had
been executed, but Mr. Parkers letter revealed otherwise.
It stated that his brother -
John Roberson Parker - was part of a crew of 11 in a PB4Y-1 Liberator
aircraft called the Queen Bee of US Navy Squadron VPB117
that was shot down on January 28, 1945 over the waters north of
Taiwan on a routine patrol. Five of the crew died and the other
6 were taken prisoner. They were moved to Taihoku (Taipei) where
they were held as POWs after being interrogated by the
Kempetai.
One of the group, Ensign John
Bertrang was severely injured in the crash of the aircraft and was
taken to a local hospital. Later he was sent on to Japan where he
finished his days as a POW in hospital there. After the war he was
returned to the US Navy Hospital in Chicago where he subsequently
recovered. He passed away some years later.
On June 19, 1945 - less than
two months before the Japanese surrender, John Parker, the rest
of his crew, and nine other captured Americans were brought before
a Japanese War Disciplinary Tribunal and found guilty
in a brief, mock trial and executed that same day by a Japanese
firing squad. In addition to the five Navy crewmen of the Liberator,
three other US Navy and six US Army personel were executed that
day.
The names of the Japanese who
committed this mockery of justice are known. The tribunal was comprised
of Lt. Col. Naritaka Sugiura, Chief of the Tribunal; Col. Seiichi
Furkawa former Chief of the Judicial Dept. of Japans
10th Army; Lt. Gen. Harukel Isayama, Chief of Staff, 10th Army;
and Capt. Yoshio Nakano, Judge.
All of these facts were obtained
in the fall of 1945 by the father of one of Johns crewmates
who visited the navy department at that time and received excellent
co-operation from them. Copies of official
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US Navy department documents
were obtained, and Charles has sent the TPCMS copies of all this
material to us to help verify the story.
In the past few years
Charles Parker has tried to obtain more information about his brother
but upon approaching the War Department and the Navy Department
he was told that somehow all of the pertinent records had gone
missing so no information could be given about John Parker
or the incident of his trial and execution. It seems not only the
Japanese want to cover up these atrocities, but so now does the
US government!
So Charles, who had been
referred to the TPCMS by the University of Florida Research Center,
turned to us to see if we could find anything more about his brother
and the camp in which he might have been interned.
By examining records obtained
from the US National Archives and another source, we found that
the Japanese had turned the cremated remains of 15 American military
personel over to the Allies after the Japanese surrender on Taiwan.
In a careful check of the Japanese records on the same incident
we found that although the names had been badly mis-spelled due
to poor phonetic skills, the names on the captured Japanese list
matched the list of the men executed in June 1945.
By checking the POW camp
records and from accounts from other POWs, these 14 men were not
held in the main Taihoku #6 camp, and the only other camp in the
Taihoku area was Camp #5. This would fit as Camp #5 would have been
empty at the time the crew of the Liberator were captured in January
1945.
All the senior officers
who had been held there had been moved to China in September 1944,
and the only other group of POWs to go there were a group of 14
men who had been sent to Mosak Camp #5 from Kinkaseki in November
of that year. They had been moved out in early January, so by then
Camp #5 would be empty again. It is most likely that the crew of
the Liberator and the other Americans were taken to this camp in
late January and remained there until their execution in June of
that year.
We are pleased to be able
to help Charles with this information, and very grateful to him
for sharing this story with us. Now maybe his brother John and the
others will always be remembered.
Postscript - After the war Col. Furkawa and Lt. Col. Sugiura
were both executed by an American firing squad, while Lt. Gen. Isayama
and Capt. Nakano were sentenced to life in prison. So some justice
was done!
The site of the former Taihoku Mosak Camp #5 was found in June of
last year.
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