Saturday, July 12, 2014

THE CHANGI PRISON HANGINGS OF JAPANESE WAR CRIMINALS (JULY 1946)






In passing sentence on the accused the court is merely carrying out the laws of British and international justice. We are not taking our vengeance, but protecting society from the ravages of cruelty and imposing a sentence to act as a deterrent to others who, in the years to come, may be like minded.

[Colonel J. L. McKinlay, Australian war crimes trials, Morotai, National Archives of Australia: A471, 80717.]
  

Two Australian military policemen guard Japanese prisoners outside the court on Labuan Island, Borneo, December 1945. The prisoners are (from left): Lieutenant Ojima, Lieutenant Yamamoto, Captain Nakata and Captain Takino. All four were sentenced to death by shooting for their ill-treatment of prisoners during the war. [AWM 123170] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]

 

Two Australian military policemen guard Japanese prisoners outside the court on Labuan Island, Borneo, December 1945. The prisoners are (from left): Lieutenant Ojima, Lieutenant Yamamoto, Captain Nakata and Captain Takino. All four were sentenced to death by shooting for their ill-treatment of prisoners during the war. [AWM 123170] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]


War crimes trials

Even before World War II ended Allied authorities began collecting evidence of war crimes committed by the Japanese in the countries they occupied. This culminated in a series of trials held throughout the Pacific between 1945 and 1951 which mirrored war crimes trials in Europe.

There were three levels of trials conducted. A Class trials (conspiracy to wage and start war) saw twenty-eight high-ranking Japanese officers and politicians, including Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, tried in Tokyo by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East. The IMTFE consisted of judges from eleven nations with an Australian High Court judge, William Webb, serving as president.

Class B (violations of the laws and customs of war) and C (crimes against humanity) trials were held by national governments — Australia, Britain, China, France, Holland, Philippines and the United States — at various locations throughout the Pacific. In total 5379 Japanese, 173 Formosans and 148 Koreans were tried. Of these 984 were sentenced to death, 475 to life imprisonment and 2944 to some form of punishment.

Neither the Japanese Emperor Hirohito, nor any member of his family, was tried in any category.


General Tomoyuki Yamashita arriving at the military tribunal in Manila, Philippines, in 1945. Yamashita was the commanding general during the conquest of Malaya and in the Philippines. He was held responsible for atrocities committed by troops under his command and found guilty of failing to prevent them. The trial set a controversial precedent known as ‘command responsibility’, which held that an officer could be charged if he failed to control the acts of troops under his command. Yamashita was executed by hanging in February 1946. [AWM 119134] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]
 

The Australian War Crimes trial, Darwin, 1946. National trials such as these were held throughout the Pacific. Four Australians comprise the members of the court: Major D. F. Field, Major G. J. Ruse, Lieutenant Colonel A. Brown, Captain W. T. Smith. Out of frame, are the Japanese accused. [AWM NWA1067] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]
The Australian B and C Class trials, which included crimes against prisoners of war and the execution of Allied air men, were conducted by military courts under the Australian War Crimes Act of 1945. They were held at Morotai, Wewak, Labuan, Rabaul, Darwin, Singapore, Hong Kong and Manus Island. In all, Australia conducted nearly three hundred trials, in which 924 Japanese servicemen were accused of war crimes. Of these, 644 were convicted and 148 were sentenced to death, although 11 had their sentences commuted.

Execution was carried out by firing squad or by hanging. This was the first and only time that the Australian military conducted executions. Indeed, such was the Australian inexperience that it was necessary to ask for British advice on gallows and firing squads.


Accused Japanese bow before the Australian court in Darwin, 1946. [AWM NWA1064]
Between June 1946 and July 1947 a total of 111 Japanese and Korean soldiers were convicted for crimes on the Thai–Burma railway in Singapore. Death sentences were given to 32 of these men.

Among those tried were some of the most feared men on the railway. Sergeant Seiichi Okada, also known as ‘Doctor Death’ for his role as a medical orderly in the Hintok–Konyu area, was sentenced to ten years in prison in Singapore. The Korean Arai Koei, also known as the ‘Boy Bastard’, was sentenced to death by hanging for his role in the ill-treatment of prisoners on the Burma side of the railway.

The Japanese soldiers who were sentenced to death reacted in different ways. Many maintained a pride in their service to the emperor. Lieutenant Seizo Tanaka, executed in 1946 on Morotai, wrote to a family member:



It is decided I will be shot 7 o’clock 6 mar. I was sentenced to death, but not because I did a shameful act. Rather I think it an honour for me ... By my culture, I am resigned facing death.

[AWM54 1010/1/29]


Initially the Australian government maintained a prison on Manus Island, north of New Guinea, for Japanese prisoners. However, by 1953 all Japanese held in Australian camps had been returned to Japan to complete their sentences.

Japanese prisoners playing cards, Morotai, 1945. These men had been sentenced to death for executing three Australian airmen and were waiting the outcome of their appeal. [AWM OG3692] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]
The war crimes trials have been criticised, particularly in Japan, as ‘victors’ justice’. Certainly much of the punishment fell on relatively lowly ranked Japanese who had little control over issues such as the pace of work or supply of food and medicine to the prisoners. The trials have also been criticised on procedural grounds; such as the fact that evidence was taken from witnesses, including POWs, who were not produced in court to be cross-examined. In addition, evidence that was prejudicial to the defendant but irrelevant to a particular case was introduced.

Yet the trials were not necessarily a manifestation of vengeance: 280 of the 644 Japanese accused in Australian war crimes trials were acquitted. Moreover, victims of the Japanese, such as Stan Arneil and Lieutenant-Colonel E.E. ‘Weary’ Dunlop, did not call for reprisals against the Japanese. Many simply wanted to go home. Dunlop himself worked for post-war reconciliation with Asia.

The gallows house in Changi gaol where eighteen Japanese war criminals were executed by hanging during 1946. [AWM P04279.005] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]


A convicted Japanese war criminal being led to the gallows at Changi gaol to be executed by hanging, 1946. A total of 18 Japanese war criminals were executed by hanging at Changi. [AWM P04279.007] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]            


A hangman positions a noose around the neck of a Japanese war criminal prior to his execution at Changi gaol, 1946. The condemned man is standing on a trapdoor which was opened to complete the execution. Done correctly, death by hanging was quick as death came from the snapping of the neck rather than strangulation. [AWM P04279.004] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#] 


A Japanese war criminal falls to his death, Changi, 1946. The trapdoor has just been sprung by the operator whose hands are visible on the left. [AWM P04279.011] [PHOTO SOURCE: http://hellfire-pass.commemoration.gov.au/after-the-war/war-crimes-trials.php#]       


5 comments:

  1. AAAAHHHHHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. I can understand the intense emotions behind your comment. However, every rational person understands that the mind set required to commit such atrocities is the dehumanization of the "other". Your calling these war criminals animals is an example of such dehumanization and is not fair to animals.

      Delete
  3. The worst race of people known to mankind.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Time and place many of the Japanese atrocities during World War II were horrendous. And the Japanese War Criminals certainly received better than they deserved. But crimes are committed by individuals not peoples.

    ReplyDelete