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Move by Top Legislative Body Highlights Japanese Aggression in World War II
China's top legislative body Thursday designated two new national days aimed at highlighting Japanese aggression during World War II.
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress approved proposals designating Sept. 3 as "War Against Japanese Aggression Victory Day" and Dec. 13 as a day of remembrance for victims of the Nanjing Massacre, according to state media.
Japanese troops captured Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937, and spent the next six weeks torturing and killing civilians in the city. Japan officially surrendered to the Allied Powers on Sept. 2, 1945, in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri that marked the end of the war.
Tensions between Japan and China have been on the rise, stoked by a territorial dispute in the East China Sea and a recent visit by Japan's prime minister to a shrine where Japanese war criminals are honored. The conflict has stoked nationalist sentiment on both sides.
"The approval of the national days has great historical significance and is a necessity in current circumstances," the state-run Xinhua News Agency quoted an unnamed foreign ministry official as saying.
China has other days dedicated to remembrance of its long conflict with Japan. They include Sept. 18, which marks the day Japanese troops invaded the city of Shenyang, beginning a wider takeover of northeast China. National days in China aren't public holidays but days of commemoration typically marked by essays and speeches.
Xinhua noted that the Chinese government had already designated Sept. 3 as victory day in 1951. Official media accounts didn't explain why Beijing felt the need to re-ratify that decision.
China Designates Two New National Days - WSJ.com
China's top legislative body Thursday designated two new national days aimed at highlighting Japanese aggression during World War II.
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress approved proposals designating Sept. 3 as "War Against Japanese Aggression Victory Day" and Dec. 13 as a day of remembrance for victims of the Nanjing Massacre, according to state media.
Japanese troops captured Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937, and spent the next six weeks torturing and killing civilians in the city. Japan officially surrendered to the Allied Powers on Sept. 2, 1945, in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri that marked the end of the war.
Tensions between Japan and China have been on the rise, stoked by a territorial dispute in the East China Sea and a recent visit by Japan's prime minister to a shrine where Japanese war criminals are honored. The conflict has stoked nationalist sentiment on both sides.
"The approval of the national days has great historical significance and is a necessity in current circumstances," the state-run Xinhua News Agency quoted an unnamed foreign ministry official as saying.
China has other days dedicated to remembrance of its long conflict with Japan. They include Sept. 18, which marks the day Japanese troops invaded the city of Shenyang, beginning a wider takeover of northeast China. National days in China aren't public holidays but days of commemoration typically marked by essays and speeches.
Xinhua noted that the Chinese government had already designated Sept. 3 as victory day in 1951. Official media accounts didn't explain why Beijing felt the need to re-ratify that decision.
China Designates Two New National Days - WSJ.com