Chapter 134: The Inside Story of Bacteriological Warfare (2)

Later, Li Baochang was sent to feed the horses. But the strange thing is that Li Baochang fed the horses fat, and the Japanese soldiers never rode them, nor did they let the horses work, but asked Li Baochang to record the horse's activities every day, and the content was nothing more than when to exercise, when to eat, and so on.

What impressed Li Baochang the most was the mysterious "big room". "That large room is probably a lecture hall, with two complete skeletons of dead people threaded with ropes hanging on the wall, and a clay mannequin on the desk, often with Japanese officers in white coats giving lectures to soldiers." Li Baochang said, "One day I had the courage to peek through the crack in the door and listen to what they were doing, but I couldn't understand a word, and I couldn't understand it. ”

Captain Masao Ogami of Detachment 643 and experimenter Kikuchi confessed to the court the crimes of cultivating bacteria and manufacturing bacteriological weapons in Hailin.

According to the confessions of these two people, the task of cultivating fleas in Detachment 643 was the responsibility of Nakamura, the head of the first department; The work of breeding rats was carried out by the head of the supply department, Kamio, who initially consisted of only 10 people, who were tasked with collecting captured rats from various units and residents' homes. The bred rats are equipped with special buses from the 643 camp to Harbin and Hailar, or from Hailin Station to Pingfang Station.

Li Baochang recalled, "At that time, I often saw large trucks transporting large wooden boxes with the words 'Hailin Station' to 'Binjiang Station' to the station, but I didn't know what was inside. ”

Cheng Jisi's research showed that Unit 643 also bred fleas, which were also sent to Unit 731 to be infected with plague bacteria, making it a bacteriological warfare weapon. In 1943, Major General Masaji Kitano of Unit 731 set the task for Detachment 643 of Hailin to step up epidemic prevention services in the Mudanjiang area and breed fleas in large numbers. The detachment leader, Masao Ogami, immediately sent people to Unit 731 to study, and the study time was half a month or a month, and when they returned from studying, they began to carry out the work of breeding fleas in large numbers.

Another document proves that the main direction of the bacteriological research of Detachment 643 is to study the nutrient solution on which bacteria reproduce by cultivating typhoid fever, paratyphoid, malaria, tuberculosis and other bacteria, with the aim of creating a nutrient solution that enables bacteria to grow rapidly and preserve their vitality for a long time, and to find a way to make nutrient solution faster. In 1944, the 13th Fu, head of the production department of Unit 731, Bingze 13, was ordered to personally go to the Hailin detachment for the purpose of researching equipment for cultivating a large number of bacteria in Hailin. "However, the heavy task assigned to Detachment 643 by Unit 731 was defeated before it could be implemented." Cheng Jisi said.

The fact that Unit 731 equipped Unit 643 with 6 boilers. He said that in those years, the Japanese army used a train to transport six large boilers to the "East Daying" for several days. The surrounding people don't know what the big boiler is for, and they all watch the excitement on the side of the road.

Now Li Shurong's house in the village is the headquarters of Unit 643 back then, and the small house with a thick chimney behind the house was originally a boiler room, and now it is inhabited by a family surnamed Ma, this boiler room is specially used to burn and dispose of office waste paper and documents, and no one knows why the Japanese army burned these documents.

Now Li Ming's agents began to sort out the evidence, and also found some information that the Japanese army's 1855 bacteriological unit conducted bloody research under the ancient imperial city for 7 years. They have a mysterious connection to the notorious Unit 731 and were responsible for the massive cholera epidemic in Peiping in 1943!

In the winter of 1945, Tang Feifan, the former director of the Epidemic Prevention Department of the Central Committee of the Kuomintang, sent Zhong Pinren to the underground cold storage to inspect it. There were smashed wooden cabinets and containers everywhere, and among the garbage on the floor, Zhong Pinren found six test tubes with Japanese women's names written on them. After the culture experiment, it was found that the first 5 test tubes were poisonous Y. pestis, and the toxicity of the other test tube had disappeared. In the subsequent large-scale inventory, it was found that three 6-meter-long cauldrons left by the Japanese army were used to sterilize the vessels used to cultivate strains. In addition, there are a large number of aluminium incubators in the warehouse.

Shiro Ishii, the commander of the notorious 731 bacteriological unit in the Japanese invasion of China, served as a technical instructor in the 1855 unit. The names of the backbone of Unit 1855 can be seen on some important positions in Unit 731.

The Japanese army used the biological equipment and facilities of the former Kuomintang Central Epidemic Prevention Department for bacteriological research. In October 1939, Eiji Nishimura took office, and the "1855th Unit of Beiping A" was officially named, becoming one of the four new bacteriological units formed by the Japanese army in Beiping, Nanjing, Guangzhou and Singapore. At the same time, Shiro Ishii's bacteriological unit moved to the town of Pingfang in Harbin and was renamed Unit 731.

On the second day of the outbreak of the Pacific War, the first detachment of Unit 1855 forcibly occupied the Union Medical College, and the second detachment forcibly occupied the Static Biological and Social Investigation Institute, which were later renamed the first and third classes respectively.

Unit 731 once referred to the subjects as "models". And Unit 1855 also had its own special code, such as calling mice "cakes", fleas "millet", and living people used for experiments "apes". The staff of the local chronicle found statistics about "apes" on a table of entry and exit of test subjects of Unit 1855.

In the summer of 1944, Unit 1855 escorted 17 prisoners to the Chinese prisoner camp for three consecutive days for human experiments. In order to prevent the captives from resisting, the Japanese army handcuffed everyone and falsely claimed to take them to the hospital. The captives who were escorted were immediately put into their cells, and the captives, who seemed to have become alert, refused to eat anything. The Japanese military doctor forcibly injected the bacteria and viruses into their bodies, and in less than 24 hours, all 17 people died in intense pain, and their bodies were transported to the first class for autopsy. After that, another **** person was tied hand and foot, stuffed with something in his mouth, packed in a sack, transported to the experimental site by truck, conducted human experiments, and died after a week.

In July 1943, Unit 1855 conducted half-month special training on cholera prevention and bacteriological testing with more than 200 alternate non-commissioned officers of the Second Army Hospital of the Japanese Army. According to the confession of Tomoyoshi Nagata, who participated in the training, one day, when he walked into the cholera bacteria culture room in the second class, he saw a culture vessel with a height of 2 meters, a length of 1.5 meters, and a width of 80 centimeters. A medic lieutenant on duty pointed to the incubator and claimed: "There are countless cholera bacteria cultivated here, and with these cholera bacteria, we can kill all human beings in the world at once." ”

News of a plague epidemic in Peking. According to reports, by the end of October, a total of 2,136 cholera patients had been found in the city, 1,872 had died, and 92 had died from road falls.

The historical records reviewed confirm that there has been no cholera epidemic in Beiping since 1939. In the first half of 1943, however, the Beijing Regional Epidemic Prevention Committee, which was controlled by the Japanese army, threw out a "Cholera Prevention Implementation Plan", which formulated a series of measures such as cholera prevention propaganda, personnel training, and quarantine, isolation, disinfection, and traffic restrictions after the outbreak of cholera. Cholera only broke out five months later, did the Japanese puppet agency have the ability to predict the future? The information also shows that at the time of the cholera outbreak in Peiping, Unit 1855 participated in the operation to spread cholera bacteria in the Luxi area, and Eiji Nishimura was one of the commanders. Apparently, the cholera epidemic in Peiping was premeditated by the 1855 troops, who spread cholera bacteria in the well water of Peiping and used Chinese throughout Peiping to do their bacteriological experiments.

Li Ming sent a large number of personnel to investigate the evidence of the Japanese army's crimes, and it is believed that the results will be obtained soon。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。

In 1942, the members of the Japanese Joint Society for Microbiology took a group photo, and all the participants were Japanese bacteriological researchers. Among the two soldiers in the front row, Shiro Ishii is on the left and Masaji Kitano is on the right. The second from the left in the third row is the commander of the Nanjing 1644 unit, Masuda Chisada.

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Bacteriological weapons (also known as biological weapons) are a weapon of mass destruction that operates on the pathogenic properties of biological agents. As early as 1925, the countries of the world signed the Agreement on the Prohibition of Poison Gas or Similar Poisonous Gas and Bacteriological Methods, which explicitly prohibited the production and use of such weapons, which violated minimum humanitarian principles. At that time, Japan refused to participate in the program, and openly defied the condemnation of the whole world by organizing forces to extensively collect information on bacteriological warfare and to manufacture bacteriological weapons to carry out its idea of developing bacteriological weapons and using them for aggression, because they believed that bacteriological weapons were effective "nuclear weapons" for small countries to deal with big countries.

In 1932, according to the emperor's decree, the Japanese military department established the first bacteriological weapons research institute "Bacteriological Research Group", which was known as the "Epidemic Prevention Research Laboratory" to the outside world. As the war of aggression continued to expand, the bacteriological warfare activities of Japanese imperialism became even more frenzied. In 1936, the notorious Unit 731 and Unit 100 were established in Harbin and Changchun, which were occupied by the Japanese army. After that, the Japanese army set up "Jiazi 1855 Unit" in Beijing, "Rongzi 1644 Unit" in Nanjing, and "Bozi 8604 Unit" in Guangzhou. In 1942, the establishment of Singapore's "Gangzi Unit 9420" marked that the Japanese army's bacteriological unit had formed a complete bacteriological warfare system and command system with certain combat capabilities.

Among them, the establishment of Nanjing's Rongzi 1644 bacteriological unit was tantamount to bringing another terrible wound to Nanjing, which was plagued by disasters at that time. From December 14, 1937 to February 7, 1938, the Japanese army, at the instigation of its commander, burned, killed, plundered, and committed all kinds of evil, slaughtering 300,000 Chinese soldiers and civilians. Less than 14 months after this atrocity, the specter of the Japanese bacteriological forces began to loom in Nanjing.

Accumulation of white bones, revealing a little-known secret

As a result, the criminal activities of the Japanese Army's Unit 1644 in bacterial multiplication and using living people as experimental subjects were further confirmed.