Japan to dispose of WWII chemical weapons (CRI) Updated: 2005-10-09 07:09
Japan will dig up and dispose of leftover World War II chemical weapons
thought to be buried in Dunhua, Jilin Province, in northeastern China from next
Wednesday through Nov. 23 in cooperation with the Chinese government, the
Japanese Cabinet Office said Friday.
Takeshi Erikawa, vice minister for the Cabinet Office, will visit China for
five days starting Tuesday to discuss with Chinese officials disposal of the
weapons abandoned by the Imperial Japanese Army, government officials said.
He will also visit the venues where Japan is planning to build two chemical
weapons-disposal facilities in Jinlin Province.
The bulk of an estimated 700,000 artillery shells abandoned by Japan are
believed to be buried in the province.
Two children were injured by abandoned Japanese chemical weapons in July 2004
in Dunhua.
In Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, three people were injured by abandoned
Japanese chemical weapons in June.
Meanwhile, in Qiqihar, Heilongjiang Province, gas leaking from leftover
Japanese chemical weapons killed one local resident and injured 43 others in
August 2003.
Japan estimates its forces abandoned more than 700,000 chemical weapons in
China during the war, although Chinese experts say as many as two million exist
-- the world's largest stockpile of abandoned chemical arms.
Some 90 percent of abandoned chemical weapons, including mustard gas, a
highly poisonous blistering agent, are buried in Jinlin and experts fear
chemical agents from the weapons may have polluted the soil in the area.
Under the UN Chemical Weapons Convention, Japan has until 2007 to destroy all
of the chemical weapons its troops left in China.
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