The Borneo Post

Chinese man held over fire at Tokyo war shrine

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TOKYO: A Chinese man suspected of starting a fire inside a Tokyo war shrine at the centre of rows with Japan’s Asian neighbours was arrested by police yesterday, reports said.

The man, 55, allegedly set fire to a pile of newspapers inside the grounds of the Yasukuni Shrine, which honours 2.5 million war dead but also enshrines top World War II criminals.

Jiji Press agency and public broadcaste­r NHK both reported the arrest and said the fire was quickly extinguish­ed, with no reports of any damage or injuries.

The man was arrested on suspicion of trespassin­g, reports said.

A spokesman for the shrine acknowledg­ed the incident while avoiding further comment as “police are investigat­ing”. A Tokyo police spokesman declined to confirm the report.

Bystanders reportedly said the man had been holding a banner with a message protesting the 1937 Nanjing massacre.

China says 300,000 people died in a six-week spree of killing, rape and destructio­n by the Japanese military that began in December 1937 after invading troops seized the city of Nanjing.

Some respected foreign academics estimate a lower number of victims, but mainstream scholarshi­p does not question that a massacre took place.

However, it remains a source of bad blood between the Asian neighbours due to disagreeme­nt over the scale of the slaughter and periodic denials by Japanese arch- conservati­ves that massacre even happened.

Despite rows over history and territoria­l disputes, relations between Tokyo and Beijing have been improving in recent years.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe travelled to China in October for first official visit by a Japanese premier since 2011.

But the Yasukuni shrine has been a regular source of tension between Japan and its regional neighbours.

Visits by senior Japanese politician­s routinely draw angry reactions from China and South Korea, and Abe has avoided trips to the site in recent years.

In 2015, a South Korean man detonated a homemade pipe bomb in the toilets at the shrine, but no one was hurt in the blast. — AFP the

 ??  ?? People enter through Yasukuni Shrine’s main gate in Tokyo. — AFP photo
People enter through Yasukuni Shrine’s main gate in Tokyo. — AFP photo

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