PDA

View Full Version : World War II stragglers may have lived undetected in mountains



Phantom Blooper
05-28-05, 08:36 PM
Sat, May. 28, 2005





World War II stragglers may have lived undetected in mountains

BY YOSHIO HANADA

The Yomiuri Shimbun


GENERAL SANTOS, Philippines - (KRT) - The discovery of two men believed to have been soldiers in the Imperial Japanese Army deep within the mountains of Mindanao Island in the southern Philippines leads one to wonder: What have they been doing for the 60 years since the end of World War II?

Prior to the outbreak of the Pacific War, there were about 26,000 Japanese living in the island's main city, Davao, which was known as the Japanese Kingdom.

Today, the area is rife with Islamist extremists, and the Philippine government has lost control of some parts of it. Yet somehow, the men believed to be Yoshio Yamakawa, 87, and Tsuzuki Nakauchi, 85, have survived this era of change.

According to Hikaru Miyake, the 62-year-old chairman of an association of Japanese in Davao, many Japanese moved to the region before the war to grow jute, a fiber used largely in burlap and twine.

When the war began, many of these permanent residents were drafted as civilian employees of the army, later fleeing with Imperial Japanese Army troops when U.S. forces made landfall on the island.

But the majority of these residents-cum-soldiers who lost their lives during the war did not fall to U.S. bullets, but to infectious and endemic diseases such as malaria and to indigenous tribesmen in the mountains.

According to local sources, while many expatriates returned to Japan out of fear of retaliation at the hands of Filipinos, some chose to stay and moved to rural areas where they concealed their nationality.

Thus Yamakawa and Nakauchi could easily have passed undetected in the mountains. But today, Mindanao is home to a number of extremist Islam groups, including the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which is seeking to establish an Islamic state on the island.

While the vicinity around General Santos is a base for commerce for the southern part of the island, it is also the gateway to a terrorist highway through which foreign extremist groups that have close ties with local extremist Islamic groups pass on their way to other areas in which they are active.

It is unclear if the two Japanese men had any kind of relationship with the terrorist groups. It is unlikely they were involved with the Islamists, Miyake said, but, he added, "perhaps they weren't discovered until now because they successfully blended and married into local society."

A spokesman for the MILF on Friday told The Yomiuri Shimbun: "I don't know the Japanese men in question. I've met men in the mountains who resemble Japanese, but I haven't confirmed whether they are Japanese."

However, information on Imperial Japanese Army stragglers often filters down into local communities. The Davao association learned two months ago that several former soldiers were in mountains. The local who passed the information onto the association claimed they said that if they could return to Japan, they would ask the Japanese government to pay them money. But the veracity of the story remains unverified.

In October, the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry received information from a man, who has dealings with the government department that deals with war dead, that four people believed to be former Imperial Japanese Army soldiers were alive on Mindanao Island.

Since then, the ministry has urged its contacts in the area to obtain tangible evidence of their existence, such as letters and photographs.

In addition, the health ministry asked the Foreign Ministry in a written request dated Jan. 17 to forward any relevant information it had. But it is unlikely that the two ministries have cooperated to any useful degree in trying to get to the bottom of the case. Commenting on the fact that it took three months for the health ministry to make the written request to the Foreign Ministry after it obtained the information, a senior health ministry official said, "We conveyed the information verbally to the Foreign Ministry as soon as we got it." But a senior Foreign Ministry official said, "The health ministry gave us the information in January."

After learning about the suspected stragglers through the Foreign Ministry, the Japanese Embassy in Manila urged Japanese in the area for any information they had. But it faced difficulty gathering information in the region due to a deterioration in the security situation caused by the guerrillas.

On Thursday, a private individual involved in collecting the remains of Japanese war dead informed the embassy he could arrange a meeting with the two former soldiers in General Santos. According to embassy staff members, the man said that as the area in which the former soldiers live is unsafe, he would bring them to a city hotel.

The staff members told the Foreign Ministry they were going to General Santos to see two men as they reportedly had forms of identification.

If they can identify themselves and express a desire to return to Japan, the government will give them a health check at a hospital in Manila and provide transport home.

The government regularly receives reports of stragglers in the southern islands of the Philippines from organizations of families of Japanese war dead involved in projects to gather their remains.

Each time the health ministry receives a report, it dispatches officials - in cooperation with the Foreign Ministry - to the area. But it has been unable to obtain evidence directly related to the whereabouts of the purported stragglers.

The health ministry searched for them on Mindanao Island in 1972 and 1973 after hearing reports that there were 26 former soldiers living together in the mountains, but could not confirm whether that was true.

According to the ministry, Imperial Japanese Army soldiers disarmed on battlefields were returned to Japan by the end of the 1950s. But there were more than a few stragglers who had become separated from their units in the jungle or who were not informed of the end of the war. In all, as of 1960 there were an estimated 6,000 soldiers who had not been repatriated.

But with the passage of time, many of these missing men have been listed as deceased on family registers. As a result, the number of soldiers listed as missing in action has decreased over the years. According to the health ministry, there are now only 24 soldiers and civilian military employees listed as missing. These include 18 who went missing in China. Three of the other six went missing in Myanmar, Vietnam and Truk Islands. The place of disappearance of the other three is unknown, but none are listed as having disappeared in the Philippines, and Yamakawa and Nakauchi are registered as war dead.

---

© 2005, The Yomiuri Shimbun.