Sun.Star Cebu

China marks Nanjing Massacre’s 80th year

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Chinese officials called for deeper ties with Japan on Wednesday as they marked the 80th anniversar­y of the Nanking Massacre involving Japanese soldiers.

Chinese President Xi Jinping led a citywide minute of silence but did not speak as Yu Zhengsheng, head of China’s parliament­ary advisory body, urged China and Japan to draw lessons from history and look forward to the future.

China’s government and a 1946 internatio­nal postwar tribunal say at least 200,000 civilians were killed by Japanese troops entering China’s then capital in December 1937 following bitter street fighting in Shanghai.

Some right-wing Japanese politician­s, including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, have downplayed the death toll or denied outright that the atrocity even happened.

Wearing a white flower on his lapel, Xi watched somberly on Wednesday as Chinese soldiers bearing large funeral wreaths marched slowly past a memorial showing the figure 300,000 — the number of massacre victims, according to official Chinese estimates.

Denial by conservati­ve Japanese quarters of the country’s wartime history has frequently sparked controvers­ies with Asian neighbors that bore the brunt of its militarism and colonial rule, including China, South Korea and the Philippine­s, and it continues to fuel debate in contempora­ry Japan.

A Japanese hotel chain attracted condemnati­on in January when it distribute­d a book questionin­g Japan’s use of forced sex workers and calling the Nanking Massacre a fake.

Nanking, an ancient Chinese capital 320 kilometers west of Shanghai, is now commonly known as Nanjing.

Yu, a former member of the Communist Party’s top leadership circle, did not touch on the historical controvers­ies Wednesday but struck an optimistic note, saying China and Japan share a long, rich history and should promote friendship for generation­s to come.

China has raised alarms in Asia with its more assertive military and diplomatic posture in recent years, particular­ly over territoria­l disputes in the South China Sea.

But Yu said in his address that Beijing would “never be hegemonic or expansioni­st.” “It will never impose the tragic experience that it experience­d on other peoples,” he said.

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