On this date, December 23, 1948,
Seven Japanese War Criminals were executed by hanging in Sugamo Prison, Tokyo,
Japan. I will post information about one of them, Akira Muto from Wikipedia.
Japanese general 武藤章 Akira Mutō (15
December 1892 – 23 December 1948)
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Born
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December 15, 1892
Hakusui, (present day of Minamiaso, Kumamoto) Japan |
Died
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December 23, 1948 (aged 56)
Tokyo, Japan |
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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1913–1945
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Rank
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Lieutenant General
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Battles/wars
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Second Sino-Japanese War
World War II |
Akira Mutō
(武藤 章 Mutō Akira, 15 December 1892 – 23 December 1948)
was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II.
Japanese War Criminal General Akira Muto at
His Arraignment (PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.allposters.com/-sp/Japanese-War-Criminal-General-Akira-Muto-at-His-Arraignment-Posters_i8531345_.htm)
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Biography
Mutō
was a native of Kumamoto prefecture, and a graduate of the 25th class of the
Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1913. He graduated from the 32nd class of the
Army Staff College in 1920. Mutō was assigned as a military attaché to Germany
from 1923–1926. On his return to Japan, he served in various administrative and
staff positions within the Imperial Army General Staff Office.
Mutō
was on the strategic planning staff of the General Staff Office in 1935, and
was chief of the military intelligence section of the Kwangtung Army at the time of the Marco Polo
Bridge Incident. He is believed to have been one of the planners
behind the incident which sparked the Second Sino-Japanese War. Promoted to
Vice Chief of Staff of the Japanese Central China Area Army, Mutō was in China
for many of the initial campaigns of the conflict, and was later charged with
having led troops during the worst excesses of the Nanjing Massacre.
Mutō
was recalled to Japan in 1939, promoted to major general in 1939, and served on
the Military Affairs Bureau of the Ministry of War.
Promoted
to lieutenant general just prior to the start of the Pacific War, Mutō served
as director of the Military Affairs Bureau at the time of the attack on Pearl
Harbor. He was assigned command of the Second Imperial Guards Division at
Singapore in April 1942. He was later assigned to command Japanese forces on
Sumatra in Japanese -occupied Netherlands East Indies from June 1944, and was
transferred to the Philippines in October 1944, where he was appointed chief of
staff of the Japanese Fourteenth Area Army under General Tomoyuki Yamashita.
He
was accused of having conducted a campaign of slaughter, torture and other
atrocities against the Filipino civilian population, prisoners of war and
civilian internees, and by ordering guerrilla containment.
After
the surrender of Japan, Mutō was arrested by the American occupation
authorities and charged with war crimes before the International Military
Tribunal for the Far East. He was convicted for atrocities against civilians
and prisoners of war in both China and the Philippines, and was executed by
hanging on 23 December 1948.
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John Dorle, Harry Clarke, Milton Sandberg,
Tomoyuki Yamashita, Hamamoto, and Akira Muto during a break from court, Oct
1945; note the autographs by Yamashita, Hamamoto, and Muto (PHOTO SOURCE: http://ww2db.com/image.php?image_id=2530)
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