寻求帮助:有关731部队实验报告

  • 主题发起人 主题发起人 enx98
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enx98

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所在地
中国
X.1, 剑寒九州或其他同仁,恳请你们帮助查询:

地点:中国东北(或其他国家或地区)(安达,我的故乡);
时间:20世纪30年代;
事件:日本731部队,在中国的实验项目,请从医学角度查询;
目的:从医学角度分析,731部队的实验目的,据一些资料表述他们曾做过大量实验,如:细菌实验,冰冻人体实验,烧伤实验,焚烧实验,心脏解剖实验,颅脑解剖实验,以及大量‘性实验’。

按照辨证思维,任何事物都有两面性。
也就是说任何事情都有好的一面,和坏的一面。

了解这些资料,有助于理解日本思维。

我是王鹏,我在北京,人民大学(非注册学生)。
北京时间:2005.4.23 10:07
 
据我了解,多数实验,都是以有生命的自然人为实验对象。
 
731部队实验报告好像是在美国人手里,至今未公布

哈尔滨好像发现了另外一个部队的报告:http://www.zj.xinhuanet.com/special/japan/pages/jp2002081905.htm

哈尔滨发现侵华日军“细菌战”手稿

  新华网浙江频道8月19日电 哈尔滨市民孟先生在该市旧货市场发现了一份破旧的、标有 “满洲帝国政府”字样的日文研究报告手稿,文中清晰地写着“炭疽毙死体”、“瓦斯坏疽样疾患”等字。经有关方面专家鉴定,确定为侵华日军细菌战研究人员手稿。

  该报告包括十一个表格,均为日文手写,其正面是印有“满洲帝国政府”稿纸的背面。表格四周有很多铅笔书写的数学计算过程及各种实验数据。

  报告注明的实验时间是“三九年九月二十四日――四零年八月五日”之间,注明的地点分别为大连、奉天、牡丹江、盖平、海城等地。实验项目内容分别为“细菌的生物学性状”、“细菌毒力”、“各种动物血球破坏力”,以及其它八项关于如何进行细菌培养方面的实验。

  据有关专家鉴定,该材料是对炭疽病致死动物身上的细菌实验研究记录。从这份报告的时间、地点和实验项目等材料来看,可以断定是当时侵华日军“一00”部队的炭疽细菌武器实验报告,它将成为侵华日军细菌战滔天罪行的又一铁证。

  据悉,炭疽杆菌是所有致病菌中最大的杆型细菌,草食动物极易感染,感染后两至三天死亡,其传染性可保持二十至三十年。人可因接触患病动物而感染,并发败血症,死亡率很高。   日军“七三一”部队、“一00”部队曾在中国东北地区广泛研究、使用过这一细菌武器。一九三九年,日军曾在中蒙边境诺门罕战役中首次进行大规模细菌战,使用的就是炭疽杆菌。当时,日军“七三一”部队在哈拉哈河上游投放了大量炭疽杆菌,造成苏蒙联军的作战、运输马匹和人员大量死亡,对这一地区的生态环境也造成了严重危害。(据《中新社》/吴兆飞 韩云鹏)

没找到什么有用的东西,搜到一篇鬼子的文章,供批判用:http://search.japantimes.co.jp/print/news/nn08-2004/nn20040804f1.htm
 
最初由 enx98 发布
X.1, 剑寒九州或其他同仁,恳请你们帮助查询:

地点:中国东北(或其他国家或地区)(安达,我的故乡);
时间:20世纪30年代;
事件:日本731部队,在中国的实验项目,请从医学角度查询;
目的:从医学角度分析,731部队的实验目的,据一些资料表述他们曾做过大量实验,如:细菌实验,冰冻人体实验,烧伤实验,焚烧实验,心脏解剖实验,颅脑解剖实验,以及大量‘性实验’。

按照辨证思维,任何事物都有两面性。
也就是说任何事情都有好的一面,和坏的一面。

了解这些资料,有助于理解日本思维。

我是王鹏,我在北京,人民大学(非注册学生)。
北京时间:2005.4.23 10:07

你在北京,不知道是否能打开下面网页:

http://www.aiipowmia.com/731/731caveat.html
 
Image - Vivisection of Girl Made Pregnant by the Operating Japanese Doctor
 
Image - Bodies of the Experimentation Victims
 
Image - Child Experimental Victim
 
Image - Memorial Tower for Unit 731 in Tokyo
 
Image - General Shiro Ishii, Head of Unit 731
 
Japan Admits Dissecting WW II POWs

By Thomas Easton
The Baltimore Sun
Index

Live dissection of American POWs
When and where
How they died
The sentence
MacArthur let the mudrerers go free

UKUOKA, Japan "I could never again wear a white smock," says Dr. Toshio Tono, dressed in a white running jacket at his hospital and recalling events of 50 years ago. "It's because the prisoners thought that we were doctors, since they could see the white smocks, that they didn't struggle. They never dreamed they would be dissected."

The prisoners were eight American airmen, knocked out of the sky over southern Japan during the waning months of World War U, and then torn apart organ by organ while they were still alive.

What occurred here 50 years ago this month, at the anatomy department of Kyushu University, has been largely forgotten in Japan and is virtually unknown in the United States. American prisoners of war were subjected to horrific medical experiments. All of the prisoners died. Most of the physicians and asistants then did their best to hide the evidence of what they had done.

Fukuoka is midway between Hiroshima and Nagasaki, cities that are planning elaborate ceremonies to mark the devastation caused by the United States'dropping the first atomic bombs. But neither Fukuoka nor the university plans to mark its own moment of infamy.

The gruesome experiments performed at the university were variations on research programs Japan conducted in territories it occupied during the war. In the most notorious of these efforts, the Japanese Imperial Army's Unit 731 killed thousands of Chinese and Russians held prisoner in Japanese-occupied Manchuria, in experiments to develop chemical and biological weapons.

Ken Yuasa, now a frail, 70-year-old physician in Tokyo, belonged to a military company stationed just south of Unit 731's base at Harbin, Manchuria. He recalls joining other doctors to watch as a prisoner was shot in the stomach, to give Japanese surgeons practice at extracting bullets.

While the victim was still alive, the doctors also practiced amputations.

"It wasn't just my experience," Yuasa says. "It was done everywhere."

Kyushu University stands out as the only site where Americans were incontrovertibly used in dissections and the only known site where experiments were done in Japan.

On May 5, 1945, an American B-29 bomber was flying with a dozen other aircraft after bombing Tachiaral Air Base in southwestern Japan and beginning the return flight to the island fortress of Guam.

Kinzou Kasuya, a 19-year-old Japanese pilot flying one of the Japanese fighters in pursuit of the Americans, rammed his aircraft into the fuselage of the B-29, destroying both planes.

No one knows for certain how many Americans were in the B-29; its crew had been hastily assembled on Guam. But villagers in Japan who witnessed the collision in the air saw about a dozen parachutes blossom.

One of the Americans died when the cords of his, parachute were severed by another Japanese plane. A second was alive when he reached the ground. He shot all but his last bullet at the villagers coming toward him, then used the last on himself.

Two others were quickly stabbed or shot to death.

At least nine were taken into custody.

B-29 crews were despised for the grim results of their raids. So some of the captives were beaten.

The local authorities assumed that the most knowledgeable was the captain, Marvin Watkins. He was sent to Tokyo for interrogation, where was tortured but nonetheless survived the war.

Every available account asserts that a military physician and a colonel in a local regiment were the two key figures in what happened next. What happened cannot be easily explained. Perhaps caring for the Americans was an impossible burden, especially because some were injured. Perhaps food was scarce.

Whatever the reason, the colonel and doctor decided to make the prisoners available for medical experiments, and Kyushu University became a willing participant.

Teddy Ponczka was the first to be handed over to the doctors and their assistants. He had already been stabbed, in either his right shoulder or his chest. According to Tono, the American assumed he was about to be treated for the wound when he was taken to an operating room.

But the incision went far deeper. A doctor wanted to test surgery's effects on the respiratory system, so one lung was removed. The wound was stitched closed.

How Teddy Ponczka died is in dispute. According to U.S. military records, he was anesthetized during the operation, and then the gas mask was removed from his face. A surgeon, Taro Torisu, reopened the incision and reached into Ponczka's chest. In the bland words of the military report, Torisu "stopped the heart action."

Tono remembers events differently. The first experiment was followed by a second, he says. Ponczka was given intravenous injections of sea water, to determine if sea water could be used as a substitute for sterile saline solution, used to increase blood volume in the wounded or those in'shock. Tono held the bottle of sea water. He says Ponczka bled to death.

Then it was the turn of the others.

The Japanese wanted to learn whether a patient could survive the partial loss of his liver. They wanted to learn if epilepsy could be controlled by removing part of the brain. According to U.S. military records, physicians also operated on -the prisoners' stomachs and necks.

All the Americans died.

"There was no debate among the doctors about whether to do the operations - that is what made it so strange," Tono says.

Word of the experiments eventually leaked out.

Thirty people were brought to trial by an Allied war crimes tribunal in Yokohama, Japan, on March 11, 1948. Charges included vivisection, wrongful removal of body parts and cannibalism - based on reports that the experimenters had eaten the livers of the Americans.

Of the 30 defendants, 23 were found guilty of various charges. (For lack of proof, the charges of cannibalism had been dismissed.) Five of the guilty were sentenced to death, four to life imprisonment. The other 14 were sentenced to shorter terms.

But the attitude of the American occupation forces began to change largely because of the start of the Korean War in June 1950. The United States had less interest in punishing Japan, an enemy-turned-ally.

In September 1950, U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, as supreme commander for Allied Forces, reduced most of the sentences. By 1958, all those convicted were free. None of the death sentences was carried out

http://www.aiipowmia.com/731/vivisection.html
 
Image - Vivisection of a Man by Unit 731 Doctors这一张有争议,有证据说是日本医生检查在中日冲突中死的日本人的尸体的照片
 
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