A large-scale search for chemical weapons abandoned by Japanese
troops at the close of World War II started Monday in Dunhua,
northeast China’s Jilin
Province. It is the first large-scale search in Dunhua’s
Lianhuapao forest area.
Eleven Japanese chemical weapons experts and several of their
Chinese counterparts had previously arrived in the area and drafted
a search plan. The local newspaper New Culture reported that
30 experts from both countries, assisted by soldiers, conducted a
preliminary search on Sunday.
The undertaking is expected to continue until November 19, with
experts systematically moving through the area looking for metal,
according to the Japanese Embassy.
The search will mainly focus on both sides of a ditch where
weapons were once found, two craters in the forest and three to
five square kilometers of the surrounding area.
New Culture stated that a large number of chemical
weapons were abandoned in the nearby Ha’erba Mountain range.
According to some estimates, there are nearly 700,000 weapons
buried in the surrounding area.
Experts say it would take at least 10 days to destroy these
weapons.
Bu Ping, a scholar from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
and a researcher on chemical weapons left by the Japanese,
estimates that Japanese troops abandoned over 2 million chemical
weapons in a dozen Chinese cities and provinces at the end of World
War II.
On July 30, 1999, China and Japan signed a memorandum in which
the Japanese government acknowledged that its troops had abandoned
these weapons in China and promised to fulfill its obligations
under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). The CWC states that
all such weapons should be destroyed by 2007.
(China Daily, China.org.cn November 9,
2004)