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Panjiayu Massacre

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ThePanjiayu massacre(Chinese:Phan gia dục thảm án) was a massacre conducted by theImperial Japanese Armyon January 25, 1941 inPanjiayu,Hebei,China.[1]An estimated 1,298 of the 1,700 people living in Panjiayu were murdered.[2]This tragedy was an example of theThree Alls Policyby the Japanese army in theSecond Sino-Japanese War.[3]The Chinese government built a memorial hall in that village in 1998.

This massacre was the result of detailed information gathering and analysis conducted by GeneralYasuji Okamura,who decreed that villages suspected of harboring or abetting the Chinese communist forces were to be completely destroyed as part of creating a buffer no-man's land around areas controlled by Japanese forces. In these "no-man's lands," nothing living, and no available shelters, should exist.

As part of the strategy, the Japanese deliberately attacked and massacred the village on the Chinese New Year's Day of 1941.

References

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  1. ^"Remembering the Panjiayu massacre".The Citizen.Retrieved2023-01-19.
  2. ^Na, He (9 October 2014)."Villagers call on Japan to atone for massacre".www.chinadaily.com.cn.Retrieved2023-01-19.
  3. ^"1941 niên 1 nguyệt 25 nhật nhật quân chế tạo phan gia dục thảm án - sưu hồ tân văn".news.sohu.com.Retrieved2023-01-19.