Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Hazard Team To Clean Wartime Mustard-gas Mess...
Asia Finest Discussion Forum > Asian Culture > Japanese Chat > Japanese Serious Talk
Ogumo
An emergency disposal team on Wednesday will start work in Qiqihar in China's Heilongjiang province on the latest cache of mustard-gas and other toxic weapons left by the Japanese Imperial Army, Cabinet Office officials said Monday.

It will be a joint operation with a Chinese team.

Fifty-two chemical shells abandoned by the army at the end of World War II were found in a Qiqihar suburb in late May, the latest in a string of such findings.

Tokyo's step is apparently intended to avert the rising tide of negative public sentiment in China toward Japan that swelled last summer over a fatal chemical-weapons leak.

Then, one man died and 43 others were sickened after being exposed to toxic liquid that leaked from abandoned weapons at a construction site in Qiqihar. It triggered a surge of anti-Japan protests.

Tokyo paid about 300 million yen in medical and other expenses. Disposal work started on that site in November.

In the latest discovery, hundreds more weapons are believed to be buried. Nearby residents were evacuated.

Beijing asked Tokyo to help retrieve the weapons, warning that unless swift action is taken to dispel residents' concerns, anti-Japanese sentiment could again flare.

The dispatched team will consist of about 30 experts, including retired Defense Agency officials, according to the Cabinet's Abandoned Chemical Weapons Office.

The team will dig up the poison-gas shells and seal them for storage. It will take several weeks, officials said.

The state-run Xinhua News Agency has also reported a drum containing Japanese chemical weapons was found inside the city. Some residents complained of health problems.

Japanese officials estimate that about 700,000 chemical weapons were abandoned in China at the end of the war. China puts the number at 1.8 million.

In April, the two governments agreed to build a disposal facility in Jilin province, where the bulk of the yet-to-be recovered chemical weapons are believed buried.

Under the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention, Japan is obliged to dispose of all discarded chemical weapons in China by 2007. It began research in the 1990s and disposal work in 2000.(IHT/Asahi: June 15,2004) (06/15)

http://www.asahi.com/english/world/TKY200406150110.html
Hiroki
This is good.


Its a shame that the Imperialists were so mixed up about their weapon caches. If they had done better at logistics and carefully recorded their positions it would not be up to an unknowing farmer or construction teams to find them.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2012 Invision Power Services, Inc.