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Japan’s Yasukuni Shrine that honours war dead, convicted war criminals, vandalised again

Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine, which honours Japan’s war dead, including convicted World War II war criminals, was vandalised again overnight on Monday.

“It is deplorable that an act seeking to denigrate the shrine’s dignity has happened again,” the shrine said in a statement.

In May, a stone pillar at Yasukuni was spray-painted red.

Jiang Zhuojun, 29, who lived north of Tokyo, was later arrested “on suspicion of vandalism and disrespect for a place of worship”, Tokyo police said in July.

A Yasukuni shrine official confirmed the new case of graffiti, without elaborating further.

Footage from public broadcaster NHK showed a stone pillar defaced with Chinese words meaning: “Dog toilet sh**. Militarism, go to hell.”

Asian nations that suffered from Japanese aggression before and during World War II see Yasukuni as a symbol of militarism.

01:43

Japan hunts for man seen on Chinese social media spray-painting ‘toilet’ on Yasukuni Shrine

Convicted Class A war criminals, including Hideki Tojo, Japan’s wartime prime minister, are among the 2.5 million Japanese war dead enshrined at Yasukuni. The shrine itself, a dramatic-looking building with sweeping roofs, also includes in its grounds memorials and museums dedicated to kamikaze pilots.

It also includes a museum that portrays Japan largely as a victim of US aggression in WWII and makes scant reference to the extreme brutality of invading Imperial troops when they stormed through Asia.

Every year on August 15, the anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II, there is scrutiny of which Japanese politicians visit Yasukuni to pray for the war dead.

Such visits have angered some of Japan’s Asian neighbours and former victims of its imperialism, especially China and South Korea.

Many regular

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