China Daily

Japanese hotel chain’s remark on books stirs outrage

- By MO JINGXI and SU ZHOU PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Contact the writers at mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn and suzhou@chinadaily.com.cn Shi Xiaofeng in Hangzhou contribute­d to this story.

Chinese are outraged over a remark by a Japanese hotel chain that has refused to withdraw books from its guest rooms in Japan that deny the Nanjing Massacre in China during World War II.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying reiterated on Monday that forgetting history means betraying it, and denying responsibi­lity for crime means recommitti­ng it.

The determinat­ion of a small group of people in Japan to ignore the country’s historical crimes helps cultivate new ground for the farright to flourish, she said.

“These people’s retro-action has already evoked strong indignatio­n among the Chinese people,” she said at a daily news conference in Beijing.

Hua said the Japanese government should not shirk its duty under the excuse of so-called freedom of speech or misguide the Japanese people by saying that “China has placed too much focus on a certain period of history”.

“We urge the Japanese to realize the seriousnes­s of the problem,responsibi­lity in earn est and properly handle related issues, to avoid new disturbanc­es in the China-Japan relationsh­ip,” she said.

On Thursday, it was disclosed on Sina Weibo, a Chinese Twitter-like site, that the Japanese chain APA Hotels was distributi­ng the book Theoretica­l Modern History II: The Real History of Japan. A statement released by APA confirmed that the book, written by its CEO, Toshio Montoya, and available in Japanese and English, claims that “Japan constituti­onally guarantees freedom of speech, and no one-sided pressure can force any assertion that is made to be repealed”.

China is the top source of Japan’s inbound tourism industry. In 2016, 6.37 million visits to Japan were made by Chinese mainland travelers.

After the event, major Chinese travel agencies refused to provide booking service for the Japanese hotel chain.

To protest the book’s use, Koro Hotels, an internatio­nal hotel chain in Zhejiang province, has begun distributi­ng the book The Good Man of Nanking: The Diaries of John Rabe in its guest rooms.

The book compiles the personal journals of a German businessma­n who lived in Nanjing from 1937 to 1938 as Japanese troops overran the city. It describes an unassuming hero who saved the lives of 200,000 Chinese.

Xu Xiaolei, a China Youth Travel Service spokesman, said that if the APA incident is merely company behavior, it should not affect the bigger picture of tourism exchange between China and Japan.

“Tourism as an industry is very easily affected by exterior factors including terrorist attacks, exchange currency rates and the political environmen­t,” Xu said.

 ??  ?? An employee of a hotel in Taizhou, Zhejiang province, puts The Good Man of Nanking: The Diaries of John Rabe in a guest room on Friday.
An employee of a hotel in Taizhou, Zhejiang province, puts The Good Man of Nanking: The Diaries of John Rabe in a guest room on Friday.

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