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  • Nobody suspected a tale of ill repute from behind the walls of this hotel. But in September

  • 2003, this luxury hotel in Zhouhai, southern China became the centre of a huge controversy.

  • A Japanese tourist group had brought back 500 Chinese prostitutes. In itself this was

  • nothing unusal, except for the date - 18 September. This was the infamous day in 1931, remembered

  • by all Chinese, when Japan began her occupation of China.

  • China was outraged. The scandal brought back memories of the barbaric treatment of Chinese

  • women during the occupation, when tens of thousands had bee used as prostitutes by Japanese

  • soldiers. It took more than 50 years for Japan to offer an apology.

  • Punishment for the Chinese organisers of the orgy, however, were harsh. Two men received

  • life sentences for their role in the act.

  • The scandal sparked a huge international crisis.

  • The recent freeze in diplomacy is a new low in relations between the two countries - stemming

  • in large part from the governments themselves. But public opinion in both Japan and China

  • is calling for more harmony.

  • It is ironic that anti-Japnese feeling is being stirred up, while Chinese history -- and

  • the death toll of Chinese at the hands of their own government is being glossed over:

  • It's imossible to justify Japan's refusal to face its Second World War history. The

  • europeans -- and germans -- have managed that a lot better. But the Chinese, too, aren't

  • looking at their own bloody past.. We know from the Communist black book that the KPCH

  • took up to 70 million lives as part of their rise to power. 70 million, that is a lot of people.

  • It is possible it was only 45, but there is naturally a difference in top estimates.

  • You simply cannot talk about it in China. There have been no charges broiught, nor even

  • discussion within the KP about its own role in history. Instead the kp are playing off

  • old style communism against nationalism. It often reminds me of what happened in the 30's

  • in Japan. That is, an extreme nationalistic undercurrent, widespread throughout the society.

  • That is the actual problem, not the few students, who demonstrate power nowadays. This nationalism

  • is not being reigned in anymore in China. And this nationalism is developing just as

  • it was in Japan in the 30s and in germany in the 20s and 30s out of economic problems.

  • And it could gain a foothold very quickly in China.

  • Japanese historians see little in the controversy. The Japanese emperor himself was jointly responsible

  • for the nationalism of the 30s, and the imperial wars were no different to those of other colonial

  • powers.

  • Japanese incursions into China, and the massacre of thousands of Chinese are even today denied

  • by many politicians and historians. Events such as the 1937 massacre at Nanking are played

  • down as minor incidents.

  • Opposition to this historical falsification has come almost exclusively from abroad -- mainly

  • China.

  • A visit by the Japanese political elite to the controversial Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo,

  • which honours what China considers to be war criminals, was also sharply condemned.

  • Some protests by Beijing were successful. From the middle of the 90's, Japenese schools

  • had stopped talking about Nanking, but instead moved to war crimes perpetrated by the Japanese

  • military. But since the premiership of Koisumi, there has been a swing to the right.

  • Nowadays only one in eight school books mentions the true number of vicxtims at Nanking.

  • There is no mention of guilt or atonemnt in any.

  • There was a war crimes trial in Tokyo like there was in in Nuremberg, but the criminals

  • were tried by the Allies, not by Japan itself. That is, the topic was quickly supressed.

  • Japan did not argue with it. That still has a lasting effect today, because the Japanese

  • see themselves as victim and not as author. While Germany since the War has thought a

  • lot about the issue, and brought to account those who need to be brought to acccount have

  • been brought to account. That never happened in Japan and that is one of the big problems.

  • As long as Koizumi has power here, little is likely to change. In fact, the opposite

  • is more likely. A small apology to the Chinese has met with a muted response, and the feeling

  • is Koizumi is hell-bent on a rivalry with China. Shortly before the historic apology,

  • a Japenese court once again rejected a request for remuneration to Chinese war victims.

  • Koizumi remains hard, because he believes historical controversy should be focussed

  • elsewhere in Asia..

  • Then you can't forget that China wants to be a world superpower and project its strength,

  • but it is up against another world power in the region. The Japanese have had their postwar

  • condition that they should not send troops overseas.. But despite this it still has a

  • very powerful army, the second most powerful army in the world. That's also true of raw

  • materials, of economic power and is even true of Taiwan . We mustn't forget that Taiwan

  • is the focus of this whole conflict. The Chinese want to tell the Japanese -- don't support

  • Taiwan, it's part of our Empire. And that is the crux of this whole affair. In the West

  • you forget that very quickly, but in Eastern Asia everyone understands.

  • Taiwan is a hot topic ostensibly because of the vast gas fields nearby -- claimed by both

  • China and Japan. Both countries are dependent on imports - Japan in particular lacks many

  • of the raw materials it needs. Experts refuse to rule out Chinese military intervention

  • in this region.

  • The Taiwanese conflict could give the new regime the chance to make its mark.

  • The current change in the Chinese leadership from the old guard of Yang Tse Min - which

  • still had ties to the civil war -- to the new guard of Hu jintao went smoothly, but

  • Jintao's position is not yet as strong as those in the west would like to see, and they

  • are always trying to intervene in China.

  • Jintao still hasn't injected any power into the military

  • and the military isn't perfectly under his control. It's always been said that a strongman

  • has to have a war to bring his army under his control. Mao Tse Tung got involced in

  • the Korea war, that cost a million Chinese livrs. Many people have forgotten Deng Xiao

  • Ping attacked Vietnam in the mid/late 70s. Now many military strategists fear Hu Jintao

  • will use a possible war with Taiwan both to bring his army under his control and, above

  • all, to strengthen it.

  • At present there are no serious signs of a military incursion. As such the Beijing Government

  • is limited to protests. Room for compromise is narrowing day by day. Both China and Japan

  • fear the crisis could affect their image with international investors and trade partners.

  • The danger is that the two great asiatic powers could fall into a serious stand-off, where

  • no-one could predict the consequences.

Nobody suspected a tale of ill repute from behind the walls of this hotel. But in September

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