Unesco on
Saturday added Chinese documents on the Nanjing Massacre to the "Memory of
the World" program, drawing an immediate protest from the Japanese
government questioning whether the U.N. body was "neutral and fair"
in registering them.
Beijing's dossier on the widespread killings of Chinese
citizens and soldiers following the 1937 capture of Nanjing by the Japanese
military is among dozens of new additions of documentary heritage, also
including two sets of archives from Japan.
The Japanese materials cover the post-World War II
internment and repatriation of Japanese by the Soviet Union and a Buddhist
temple's extensive records of its activities from the medieval to pre-modern
eras in Japan.
China had also nominated "comfort women"
files about what it calls "sex slaves for Imperial Japanese troops."
But this was not added in the biennial registration by Unesco for the
documentary version of the World Heritage and
Intangible Cultural Heritage programs, which started in
1997.
The "Documents of the Nanjing Massacre" consists of court documents from the International Military Tribunal for the Far East that convicted several Japanese as war criminals and a Chinese military tribunal, among others. They also include photos of the killings said to have been taken by the Imperial Japanese Army and film footage taken by an American missionary.
The "Documents of the Nanjing Massacre" consists of court documents from the International Military Tribunal for the Far East that convicted several Japanese as war criminals and a Chinese military tribunal, among others. They also include photos of the killings said to have been taken by the Imperial Japanese Army and film footage taken by an American missionary.
The Japanese Foreign Ministry said in a press
secretary's statement that "the nomination was made on the basis of
unilateral arguments" and "it is extremely regrettable" that
they were registered.
It "raises a question about the action of the
international organization that ought to be neutral and fair" and "it
is evident that there is a problem about the veracity" of the archives, it
said.
Differences over history have complicated Japan's
relations with China. Japanese officials may be concerned that Unesco's
registration of the documents could give Beijing ammunition against Tokyo in
promoting its campaign to highlight what it calls "the crimes of Japanese
militarism," including the Nanjing Massacre, in which it claims more than
300,000 people were killed.
Japanese historians estimate the death toll at ranging
between the tens of thousands to 200,000.
Last year China nominated the Nanjing Massacre files
and the "comfort women" documents for Unesco listing this year
on the 70th anniversary of what Beijing calls its victory in a war of
resistance against Japanese aggression and in the world war against fascism.
Tokyo argued that China was politicizing
Unesco and asked Beijing to withdraw the double nominations, which China
refused to do, according to Japanese officials.
Japanese historian Masato Miyachi, a professor emeritus
of the University of Tokyo, said, "By registering Nanjing Massacre
materials as Memory of the World heritage, Unesco is recognizing the
authenticity of documents and their significance in the world."
He noted that there are other Unesco-listed documents
about dark episodes of history such as war and slavery. "If, however, the
veracity of the documents submitted by China is questioned, that would
undermine the credibility of the entire Memory of the World heritage," he
said.
According to Japan's Foreign Ministry, the Memory of
the World screening criteria concerns the necessity of the preservation and
custody of documents and whether they represent historical truth is not
considered.
These and other documents were selected for
registration by Unesco Director General Irina Bokova following
recommendations by an international advisory panel that met in Abu Dhabi from
Sunday to Tuesday.
One of the two sets of documents listed from Japan is a
collection of some 570 memoirs, drawings and other items composed by Japanese
inmates of Siberian labor camps after World War II, and lists of those
repatriated after the war to Maizuru port in Kyoto Prefecture.
Roughly 55,000 of the nearly 600,000 Japanese soldiers
detained in labor camps in Siberia and Mongolia after the war died due to
forced labor, the severe living conditions and malnutrition.
Before applying for the registration, the Maizuru city
government investigated other documents with the help of its sister city
Nakhodka, near Vladivostok, in eastern Russia. The Japanese government and
Maizuru city applied to register those documents in March 2014.
The other collection is the archives at Toji Temple
called the "Toji Hyakugo Monjo," or Toji Temple's 100 boxes of
documents, comprised of some 25,000 documents from the years 763 to 1711. The
collection -- records of the ancient temple system and social structures -- was
designated a Japanese national treasure in 1997.
In the next registration phase in 2017, Japan will seek
to list the records of diplomat Chiune Sugihara who issued visas to help some
6,000 Jews flee from Nazi persecution during WWII, as well as three ancient
stone monuments and documents of Korean missions to Japan in the Edo period.
Nikkei Asian Review
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