On
this date, September 24, 1946, an IJA General, Yoshio Tachibana was executed by
hanging in Guam for war crimes, including cannibalism. I will post information
about him from Wikipedia and other links.
Yoshio Tachibana (立花 芳夫 Tachibana Yoshio)
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Born
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February 24, 1890
Ehime prefecture, Japan |
Died
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September 24, 1946 (aged 56)
Guam |
Allegiance
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Empire of Japan
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Service/branch
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Imperial Japanese Army
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Years of service
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1903 - 1945
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Rank
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Lieutenant General
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Commands held
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1st Independent Mixed Brigade
109th Infantry Division |
Battles/wars
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World War II
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Yoshio Tachibana
(立花 芳夫 Tachibana Yoshio, 24 February 1890 – 24 September
1946) was a lieutenant general of the Japanese Imperial Army. He was commander
of the Japanese troops in Chichijima, Ogasawara Islands, and was held
responsible for the “Chichijima Incident” a war crime involving torture,
extrajudicial execution and cannibalism of Allied prisoners of war.
Biography
Tachibana
was a native of Ehime prefecture. He graduated from the Imperial Japanese Army
Academy in 1913, and had a relatively undistinguished early career. From
1924-1925 he was assigned to the Manchukuo Imperial Army as a liaison officer.
In 1942, he was assigned to the staff of the Hiroshima regional defense command,
and promoted to major general in March 1943. In May 1944, he became commander
of the IJA 1st Independent Combined Brigade. He was further promoted to
lieutenant general on March 23, 1945, and given command of the IJA 109th
Division, which was tasked with the defense of the Bonin Islands against
invasion by American forces in the preliminary preparations to Operation
Downfall.
By
mid-1945, due to the Allied naval blockade, Japanese troops on Chichijima had
run low on supplies and were starving, so Tachibana's senior staff turned to
cannibalism. In August 1944 and February/March 1945 in what came to be known
later as the “Ogasawara Incident”, Tachibana, known to his staff as a sadistic,
alcoholic commander, issued an order that all American prisoners of war (downed
aviators) be killed.
Two
prisoners were beheaded in a public ceremony and per an account in Time
Magazine, their livers were immediately cut from their bodies and served as
sukiyaki. It was not disputed that eight prisoners of war were executed,
and some of the bodies were butchered by the division’s medical orderlies and
portions were eaten by the senior staff of the Japanese garrison.
Bowl of sukiyaki
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At
the end of the war, Tachibana and his staff were arrested by the American
occupation authorities and were deported to Guam, where they stood trial for
war crimes in connection with the Ogasawara Incident in August 1946. However,
as cannibalism was not covered under international law at the time, Tachibana
was charged with "prevention of honorable burial" in addition to his
execution of prisoners, and along with four other defendants, was sentenced to
death by hanging.
Lt.
JG Howard O. Ward filed these reports while serving on Guam for Navy
Intelligence. Please find the pdf documents to the right of the section.
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