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  1. Apr 18, 2019 · In 1942, a group of Australian nurses were murdered by Japanese soldiers in what came to be known as the Bangka Island massacre. Now, a historian has collated evidence indicating they were ...

  2. The Bangka Island massacre (also spelled Banka Island massacre) was the killing of unarmed Australian nurses and wounded Allied soldiers on Bangka Island, east of Sumatra in the Indonesian archipelago on 16 February 1942. Shortly after the outbreak of World War II in the Pacific troops of the Imperial Japanese Army murdered 22 Australian Army ...

    • Radji beach, Bangka Island
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  4. Aug 13, 2020 · The missing Japanese make up about half of the 2.4 million soldiers who died overseas during Japan’s military rampage across Asia in the early 20th century. They are on remote islands in the ...

  5. Mar 26, 2024 · Like other Japanese soldiers at the time, Yokoi believed in fighting to the death. Surrender, he was convinced, was deeply shameful. So when American soldiers stormed the island in 1944 and all but obliterated Yokoi’s comrades — Slate reports that 18,382 were killed and some 1,600 were captured — Yokoi fled with a number of his fellow troops into the jungle.

    • Kaleena Fraga
  6. Jun 13, 2022 · The Japanese lost lives in every major battle in the Pacific Theater, but the deadliest battle was the Battle of Okinawa in 1945. During the two-month battle over the island, over 100,000 Japanese soldiers died (Tzeng, 95). The American death tolls from the battle —12,000—were minuscule in comparison. In 1945, America was advancing in their ...

  7. Jan 21, 2022 · Then 56, Yokoi had spent the past 27 years eking out a meager existence in the jungles of Guam, where he’d fled to evade capture following American forces’ seizure of the island in August 1944. According to historian Robert Rogers, Yokoi was one of around 5,000 Japanese soldiers who refused to surrender to the Allies after the Battle of ...

  8. Aug 25, 2020 · The ministry's project to collect war remains began in 1952 and it has since retrieved the remains of some 1.28 million people -- about half of the 2.4 million people who died outside of Japan.

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