G.
Kostecki Affidavit
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
County of Suffolk
SS.:
I, Walter A. KOSTECKI, Major, 0-357259, MC, now residing
at
839 East 5th
Street, South Boston, Massachusetts, having had explained to me my
rights
under the 24th Article of War and being duly sworn, do depose and say:
1. a. I was born in Boston, Massachusetts, 6 March 1911.
I am
a member of
the Officers' Reserve Corps in the United States Army, having been
commissioned
a First Lieutenant in the Medical Corps on or about 10 June 1937. I was
called
to active duty 1 November 1939 and was assigned to Fort Ontario,
Oswego,
New York, where I served as assistant surgeon until 4 July 1940 when I
was
sent on detached service to Fort Dix, New Jersey. While in New Jersey,
I
was chief of the Processing Center, examining inductees. This duty
continued
until 1 January 1941 when I received orders transferring me to the
Philippine
Department. I went overseas 24 January 1941, arriving at Manila,
Philippine
Islands, 20 February 1941. I was then attached to Sternberg General
Hospital,
Manila, from 20 February 1941 to 6 March 1941, as ward surgeon; then
from
6 March 1941 to 1 August 1941 I was assistant flight surgeon at Nichols
Field,
just outside of Manila; from 1 August 1941 until captured two days
before
the capitulation of Bataan, 7 April 1942, I served as surgeon with the
46th
Infantry Regiment, Philippine Scouts.
b. I graduated from Tufts College in June 1933 with a
Bachelor
of Science
degree, having majored in chemistry; received an M.D. degree from
George
Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, D.C., in June
1937;
then for one year interned at Long Island Hospital, Boston Harbor, in a
rotating
internship; from July 1938, for one year, interned at Union Hospital,
Fall
River, Massachusetts, likewise in a rotating internship; then from July
1939
served as resident physician at Long Island Hospital, Boston Harbor, in
a
rotating residency. In November 1939 I went on active duty in the
United
States Army. During my service in the Medical Corps of the United
States
Army, I performed a large amount of surgery during my one year at Fort
Ontario
Station Hospital, Oswego, New York, as assistant post surgeon, which
work
included performance of many major operations, obstetrics and
gynecology,
in addition to the regular work of medicine. While serving as assistant
flight
surgeon at Nichols Field, Philippine Islands, and as surgeon with the
45th
Infantry Regiment, Philippine Scouts, I performed the duties of
assistant
regimental surgeon and battalion surgeon, which included the treatment
of
medical illnesses, diagnoses of surgical conditions, in peacetime; and
included
frontline treatment of emergency surgical cases and medical cases
during
the Battle of Bataan. During my medical school training at George
Washington
University School of Medicine, I studied nutritional diseases, which
course
was part of my general medical course, and also had experience in
nutritional
diseases at Gallinger Hospital, Washington, D.C.; Emergency Hospital,
Washington,
D.C.; and Children's Hospital, Washington, D.C., I had additional
experience
in nutritional diseases while serving with the 45th Infantry Regiment,
Philippine
Scouts, in Bataan.
c. Upon being captured two days before the capitulation
of
Bataan, 7 April
1942, by a Japanese Infantry unit, the name of which I do not know but
which
was situated at the junction of Trails 8 and 6, Second Corps of
frontline,
Bataan, I was forced to serve as a cargador with the Japanese Infantry
for
five days. I then was ordered on "The Death March" from Bataan to San
Fernando.
I was held at a San Fernando schoolyard for two days and three nights;
I
was left there with about 50 of the most seriously wounded and ill
Americans
who were awaiting death or new strength to continue their journey. From
19
April 1942 to 23 January 1945, I was held at Camp O'Donnell from 24
January
1943 to 23 February 1943, I was held at Cabanatuan, in the Province of
Nueva
Ecija. I was then taken with a 200-man medical group to Japan. From 17
March
1944 to 17 April 1944, I was held at Camp No. 1, Fukuoka, Island of
Kyushu,
Japan. This camp moved twice during my incarceration there. It was
first
at Kashi, suburban Fukuoka, where it consisted of a
warehouse camp
of about 300 English, 10 to 12 Dutch and 4 Americans. About 17 April
1944
I moved with the camp to an airport about two miles
from the city
limits of Fukuoka and five miles from Kashi. On or about the 25th of
April
1944, we were joined by about 100 American civilian prisoners of war
who
were taken at Wake Island
by the Japanese.
In May of the same year, we were later joined by approximately an
additional
200 Malayan and Dutch prisoners of war who were taken in the
Netherlands
East Indies. We moved to a camp, the name of which we did not know but
which
was named by us the Pine Tree Camp since it was
situated in a pine
tree grove, on or about the 19th of January 1945. This latter camp was
about
four miles from the airfield, two miles from Kashi and about a mile
from
Fukuoka city limits. The Japanese organization of these camps was the
same
and the camp always called Fukuoka Camp No. 1.
2. a. The commanding officer of Fukuoka Camp No. 1 from
March
of 1944 to
the latter part of April 1945 was Yuhichi SAKAMOTO whose rank at that
time
was First Lieutenant in the Japanese Imperial Army. He is between 35
and
40 years of age now; about 5' 5" tall; weighing approximately 150
pounds;
probably a little more swarthy than the average Jap; close-cropped
black
hair; he wore no glasses that I knew of; his actions were very
peasant-like
and took a great deal of pleasure getting into peasants' clothing and
ambling
around the camp.
b. During my incarceration at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, which
includes these three
camps above described, I had approximately l00 English, Australian,
Dutch
and American deaths. At no time was I permitted to keep clinical
records.
Upon the death of an individual, the Japanese made up their own
clinical
records without any knowledge of the patient's illness and insisted
that
I sign these records to which was attached a death certificate. I
signed
these death certificates under duress. Since these records were in
Japanese
script and since I was not able to read them, I informed the Japanese,
through
Masato HATA whose position was that of Japanese medical corpsman and
compiler
of Japanese medical records at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, that I was signing
under
duress. The Japanese had posted in the camp rules and regulations for
the
camp which included absolute obedience to Japanese orders regardless of
what
the orders were. If any order was not carried out, it constituted
"failure
to co-operate" with the Japanese which was regarded by the Japanese as
actions
verging on sabotage and therefore punishable by death. Thus, when I was
ordered
to sign the death certificates, I could do nothing else but sign
them--practically on threat of death.
c. In almost all instances of my signing death
certificates, I
examined the
bodies prior to signature. I was permitted to keep no records
whatsoever
of my medical findings at the time of these examinations. As a matter
of
fact, no prisoner held by the Japanese was permitted to keep any
pencils,
paper, pen or ink as such things were called playthings by the
Japanese,
and we were told by the Japanese that only children played with pencils
and
paper. Upon my arrival at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, the few personal articles
I
did have were searched thoroughly and all papers, books and pencils--I
had
no pen--were confiscated. From recollection, however, I do know the
main
cause of death was malnutrition and secondary to the malnutrition was
pneumonia,
diarrhea or dysentery, and, in a number of cases, beatings.
3. Yuhichi SAKAMOTO, the commanding officer of the camp,
was
definitely
responsible for the death of prisoners at Fukuoka Camp No. 1 as
follows:
a. Officer prisoners who reported atrocities committed
by
Japanese personnel
to SAKAMOTO were immediately confronted in SAKAMOTO's presence with the
Japanese
individual regarding whom the complaint was made. In substance, the
questioning
and conversation were as follows: SAKAMOTO would ask the Japanese
individual,
who had been reported, about the incident. The Japanese concerned would
deny
the atrocity charged. SAKAMOTO would then turn to the reporting officer
prisoner
and say, "Japanese soldier says that he did not do this. Why are you
lying?
Why are you trying to get Japanese soldier in trouble?" The officer
prisoner
would answer that his charge was true and SAKAMOTO would answer,
"Japanese
soldier never lies." SAKAMOTO would then turn the officer prisoner into
the
custody of the Japanese soldier for disciplining. The Japanese soldier
would
then take the officer prisoner outside and administer a thorough
beating.
Under this system, it was impossible in most instances to report the
atrocities
or non-co-operation on the part of Japanese personnel to the commanding
officer,
SAKAMOTO, and thus Japanese personnel were allowed to commit atrocities
and
administer beatings to the prisoners at will with little fear of
punishment
by their commanding officer. This, in my opinion, amounted to direct
co-operation
by SAKAMOTO with his personnel in allowing atrocities, mistreatment and
starvation of the prisoners, all of which were major contributing
factors
to death in many instances.
b. To Fukuoka Camp No. 1, nonperishable foodstuffs were
sent
approximately
once a month. These supplies consisted of rice, dried fish and dried
seaweed.
Perishables, such as meat, fresh fish and vegetables, were sent in
periodically;
for example, once in two weeks, once a month and sometimes not until
two
or even three months had elapsed. These always came in small
quantities.
As soon as nonperishables arrived in camp as specified above, the
Japanese
organization of the camp began systematically to cut rations of the
prisoners,
and, before the month had finished, a number of bags of rice, dried
fish
and seaweed would be left over. These leftovers, which amounted many
times
to approximately 50% of the prisoners' food rations, were then placed
upon
a truck by Japanese personnel in full view of Yuhichi SAKAMOTO and
taken
away from the camp to an unknown destination. Whenever the Japanese
commanding
officer of all the prison camps at Kyushu arrived for an inspection,
all
surplus stores were hidden from view. These were taken from the camp by
the
Japanese and later returned after the high Japanese inspecting officer
had
gone. SAKAMOTO witnessed these activities. About two or three days
after
surplus goods were taken by truck away from the camp as described
above,
a load of food of inferior quality, such as bean flakes, rice sweepings
and
mildewed wheat would arrive at the camp. These inferior articles were
then
mixed with rice and we were given then a diet consisting of a mixture
of
rice and the above-mentioned inferior foods. It was common knowledge
among
prisoners at the camp that the Japanese in charge of the camp,
including
the commanding officer, Yuhichi SAKAMOTO, were profiteering by
transactions
in surplus food as suggested above. By exchanging a few bags of surplus
rice,
for example, at some unknown place in some unknown way, for a
comparatively
larger amount of cheaper foodstuffs than rice, a worthwhile profit on
the
transaction was made available to the Japanese.
c. Perishable foods were received at the camp at periods
of
time ranging
from three weeks to two to three months. Upon receipt of meat into the
camp,
which never amounted to more than 50 kilograms for approximately 600
men,
the Japanese garrison would help themselves to more than half of the
meat
and then turn the balance over to the camp for the feeding of
prisoners,
which never amounted to more than 30 kilograms for the whole camp. The
same
may be said for vegetables and fish. Vegetables in particular were a
sore
point because in the case of such items as tuber vegetables, turnips,
carrots,
onions, etc., the root itself would be taken by the Japanese and the
tops
would be fed to the prisoners. We were issued the rotten bottoms and
the
tops of all vegetables and the Japanese helped themselves to the
carrots,
turnips, onions, etc. The Japanese rations were not included in our
ration
strength and anything that had been taken from the prisoners' warehouse
was,
in addition to their own Army ration. I wish to state at this point
that
the Japanese garrison at Fukuoka Camp No. 1 at all times--and I know
because
I and other prisoners were forced to wait on tables in Japanese
messes--had
an overabundance of foods both perishable and nonperishable, for their
own
use. At no time during my incarceration at Fukuoka Camp No. 1 did I
observe
a shortage of any food items in the Japanese garrison.
d. I wish to point out that the preparation of food
which the
prisoners were
permitted to make under Japanese supervision was a definite
contributing
factor to the death of many of the prisoners. The Japs would issue us a
daily
ration of fuel for the purpose of preparing the food. This fuel never
amounted
to more than enough to keep the fires in the prison galley going for
more
than an hour at the most. As the result of this, food was undercooked
and
could not be prepared in a form which the prisoners could digest,
particularly
in their weakened, starved and, in many cases, diseased condition.
Thus,
the diet which was given to the prisoners and which was so low in
calorific
value that it would barely sustain resting metabolism in anyone was
rendered
by improper preparation to even lower value as food. I and other doctor
prisoners
reported to Yuhichi SAKAMOTO, the commanding officer, through the
interpreter,
KATSURA, that the majority of the camp, probably 70 to 80%, had
developed
a severe acute dysentery or diarrhea and were passing undigested
uncooked
rice and bean kernels and vegetables. The answer to the protest was
usually
the same, briefly as follows: "Japan is a very poor country, has very
little
wood and coal." Meanwhile, I and other prisoners, from personal
observation
of the stoves in the Japanese galleys and wood piles, knew that the
Japanese
had adequate fuel available for the preparation of their own food.
e. Red Cross food, which was sent to us in the form of
prisoner of war food
parcels, was kept in the Japanese storeroom in the camp and issued to
us
at the pleasure of SAKAMOTO. During the entire time I was in Fukuoka
Camp
No. 1, the prisoners received only two issues of Red Cross foodstuffs.
One
issue of Red Cross foodstuffs was made about Christmas of 1944 and the
other
issue of Red Cross foodstuffs was made in February of 1945. At the time
of
each of these issues, we were not given full, complete Red Cross
parcels.
Rather, at the time of each issue, Red Cross food parcels were broken
open
by the Japanese at SAKAMOTO's direct order and individual food items
parceled
out to the prisoners. SAKAMOTO, who had apparently set himself up as a
medical
authority and who would not take the medical advice or suggestions of
Allied
doctor prisoners who advised that meat and milk from the Red Cross
parcels
were exactly what the prisoners needed in their diet to cure their
malnutrition
and improve their physical condition, took the milk and meat articles
from
the Red Cross food parcels and stored them separately in a warehouse.
These
items SAKAMOTO stated would, if fed to the prisoners, cause serious
diarrhea,
and, for that reason, he would not issue them to the prisoners.
Actually,
however, these meat and milk items of Red Cross foodstuffs were stored
under
conditions which permitted ready access by both SAKAMOTO and Japanese
personnel
working at the camp. I have personally observed Japanese personnel take
these
Red Cross items for their own use, and I know that at least the canned
milk
was taken by Japanese personnel to the city of Fukuoka and sold for
barter
on the black market. In one instance that I recall very well, I acted
as
the carrier of cans of milk for Masato HATA, a Japanese medical
corpsman,
in transporting the milk to Fukuoka. At another time, I saw Masato HATA
gorging
himself on Red Cross food items in plain view of the prisoners at the
camp.
f. During the time I was at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, an
accurate
day-by-day food
record was kept which was entrusted to the care of 1st Lt. Fritz DuWyn
of
the Royal Netherlands Army in Java. He can be reached at this address
and
I believe can make these food records available.
g. During my incarceration by the Japanese at Fukuoka
Camp No.
1, at no time
were sufficient facilities provided for the washing of prisoners'
clothes
or of their persons. The prisoners were not issued any soap except on
very
rare occasions. During one period of eleven months no soap at all was
issued
and then the Japanese gave out one small cake of soap for the use of
four
men. During all this period there was plenty of soap available in the
camp.
The Japanese had sufficient soap of their own and, in addition, they
had
large quantities of soap which they took from Red Cross packages and
set
aside.
4. a. During my imprisonment at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, I
worked
as a doctor
in the prison camp hospital. Upon my arrival at Fukuoka Camp No. 1,
Kyushu,
Japan, I noticed the following medical setup or organization for the
care
and treatment of the Allied prisoners of war held by the Japanese.
There
was a Japanese medical administrative building which was made up of
about
five very small rooms. One room was used as a medical dispensary and
first-aid
room, and the other rooms were used by the Japanese for preparation of
medical
records as mentioned above and for the storing of Japanese and American
Red
Cross medical supplies. Another building was set aside and was called a
hospital.
This hospital did not contain beds; patients were allotted floor space.
The
space allotted to each patient was about two feet wide and the length
of
his body in length. This resulted in overcrowding. Each patient was
forced
to lie on the floor using an issue of four Japanese army blankets and
using
as a pillow a bag filled with rice husks. Ventilation was extremely
poor
and consisted of two windows at either end of the building and no roof
vent.
The Japanese permitted no electric lights during the daytime, so that
the
inside of the hospital room was in semidarkness. Sanitation was poor or
lacking.
Latrines consisted of pits, ten or fifteen feet from the building.
There
were no urinals or bedpans in the hospital. There were no separate
bathing
facilities for the so-called hospital. The patients were required to
use
the only bathing facilities supplied to all the prisoners, which
consisted
of three wooden tubs, four feet by six feet, by four feet deep. These
tubs
were filled with water, sometimes hot, sometimes cold, but which was
not
changed except at the end of a bathing period, usually about a week.
During
the bathing period, six hundred men, including patients at the
hospital,
had the use of these three wooden tubs. I would like to say here that
the
prisoners in the ten barracks including the hospital alternated in
priority
in taking a bath first. This permitted rotation of clean water to each
barrack
about once every two months. Men in those barracks whose turn was not
first,
therefore, had to bathe, if at all, in tubs of dirty water used by many
men
before them, since the prisoners worked at hard manual labor at
airfields,
in warehouses and lumberyards, the water in the tubs became very dirty.
Many
men who were last to bathe took no bath at all.
b. Within two weeks after I arrived at Fukuoka Camp No.
1, I
was called by
Masato HATA to identify for the Japanese by name certain specific items
of
medical supplies made up wholly of Red Cross medical supplies. At that
time
I was under the impression that my identifications were for the purpose
of
enabling the Japanese to issue these Red Cross medical supplies to
prisoners
of war at Camp No. 1 and other subcamps. While making these
identifications
I saw that there were available large supplies of Red Cross medical,
dental,
and surgical equipment and medicines. However, these Red Cross medical
supplies
were at no time issued to me or to other prisoners. In other words,
although
large quantities of Red Cross supplies were available they were not
issued
for medical care of the prisoners who were required to get along with
little
or no medicines. The medical supplies which were issued by the Japanese
to
me as a doctor in the so-called prisoner hospital of Fukuoka Camp No. 1
consisted
almost entirely of Japanese proprietary quack medicines. When the
Japanese
issued these quack medicines to me they would check off a similar
quantity
to that issued of American Red Cross medicines; for example, when the
Japanese
issued a pound or kilo of Japanese dysentery powder they would check
off
a kilo of Red Cross sulfanilamide medication as having been used. The
doctor
prisoners at the camp meanwhile had a fund which they set up out of
their
own money for the purchase of medicines for the prisoner patients. This
fund
was secret and was used in a secret arrangement with Masato HATA, the
Japanese
two-star private, medical orderly. When a particular medicine was
needed
in a serious case, money was taken from the above-described fund and
given
to HATA with the understanding that he would provide the required
medicine.
The medicine obtained by HATA under this arrangement was always
Japanese
proprietary medicines and was not Red Cross medicine. In addition to
the
above fund, I had a personal and secret arrangement with Masato HATA
whereby
I paid him out of my own personal money anywhere from ten to thirty yen
per
month merely to insure that he would fill my prescriptions more quickly
than
he would have done otherwise. Even under this arrangement, Masato HATA
ordinarily
took twenty-four to forty-eight hours to fill any prescription, but I
made
the arrangement, to insure as best I could some medical supplies for
the
most seriously ill of my patients. Before I made this arrangement, and
in
a number of instances after the arrangement, Masato HATA made it a
practice
to tear up a number of prescriptions daily. In June and July of 1944
Masato
HATA went through my pile of prescriptions and tore them up at will,
many
times acting the part of a medical authority who felt that certain
items
were not necessary.
c. As for medical instruments, I saw medical, surgical,
and
dental equipment
among the Red Cross items stored by the Japanese. When I requested a
stethoscope,
thermometers and certain dental instruments which I knew the Japanese
had
on hand among the Red Cross items, I was refused. My request for these
items
went through Masato HATA.
d. I would like to explain here the system used by the
Japanese in hospitalizing
prisoner patients. Each day at five o'clock, in the afternoon sick call
was
held. There was no other time that a prisoner could see a doctor.
Emergencies
were not permitted. When a sick patient reported to sick call at the
five
o'clock in the afternoon the Allied prisoner doctor would take the
man's
temperature, make his medical diagnosis and write his findings on a
slip
of paper provided by the Japanese for that express purpose. If the
Allied
doctor so ordered, the ill prisoner did not work the following day.
However,
before a sick prisoner could be relieved from working the following
day,
the slips of paper with the Allied doctor's diagnosis were reviewed by
Masato
HATA prior to the sick men being examined by the Japanese doctor. If
the
Japanese doctor decided that the man was sick enough, in his opinion,
then
the sick patient did not have to work that day, and was admitted to the
hospital.
If, however, a man was considered well enough to work by the Japanese
doctor,
even though this finding was directly contrary to the finding of the
Allied
doctor, then the sick patient had to work regardless. Under this system
many
injustices prevailed, to the great detriment of the patients; and in
many
cases there resulted a beating for the Allied doctor concerned. In
malaria
cases, for example, when a sick patient came to sick call at five
o'clock
in the afternoon his temperature might have been taken and recorded on
the
slip by the Allied doctor as anywhere from 101 to 104 degrees. Masato
HATA
took the temperature of the malarial patient the following morning,
which
obviously would be normal since it is a well-known medical fact that
malarial
patients do not have a long protracted temperature and are usually
normal
after a period. Masato HATA then would accuse the prisoner doctor of
having
falsified Japanese medical records and then the officer in question
would
be subjected to questioning and sometimes a beating from HATA.
e. Masato HATA, each day while I was at Fukuoka Camp No.
1,
directed calisthenics
which were held early in the morning outside the barracks, both winter
and
summer, rain or shine. Prisoners of war, including patients in the
hospital
that were able to get up, were required to go outside, strip to their
underwear,
and do the calisthenics under Masato HATA's direction. In each case
regarding
prisoner patients at the hospital, Masato HATA made the decision as to
which
patients were able to get up from their beds and engage in the
exercises.
If a prisoner doctor stated that in his opinion a patient was not
medically
fit to take these exercises as, for example, if the patient had serious
boils,
high temperature, or otherwise was disabled, then Masato HATA looked
the
patient over and in most cases decided that the prisoner doctor was
wrong
and that the patient could do the exercises. The calisthenics were
conducted
each morning as follows: the officer prisoners and the enlisted
prisoners
were lined up and directed in their calisthenics by Masato HATA. After
a
series of calisthenics the officer prisoners were dismissed, but the
enlisted
prisoners were required, to continue the calisthenics until they were
exhausted.
After the officers were dismissed, I made it a practice to stand around
and
watch the calisthenics which were required by Masato HATA of the
enlisted
men. Each day Masato HATA, who carried a long bamboo replica of a
samurai
sword, beat the prisoners about the head, body, arms and legs with the
wooden
sword to urge them on to greater effort in their exercises. Those
prisoners
who were too weak, or who had weakened to the point where they could
net
raise their arms or legs or otherwise do the exercises, were especially
beaten
to make them carry on further. I have witnessed serious beatings
administered
many times to weak and seriously ill prisoners under the circumstances
as
above described. I should like to add that practically every day those
prisoners
who were weakest were singled out to remain after the group taking
calisthenics
was dismissed. These weaker prisoners were then required by Masato HATA
to
run around the compound until they fell from sheer exhaustion; most of
them
fell unconscious. I would also like to point out that the commanding
officer
of Fukuoka Camp No. 1, Yuhichi SAKAMOTO often witnessed the
calisthenics
by the prisoners as conducted and directed by Masato HATA. SAKAMOTO
during
these exercises witnessed and condoned the brutal and inhuman
treatment,
including the beatings administered to the prisoners, by Masato HATA as
above
described.
f. In my opinion these calisthenics required of the
prisoners,
directed by
Masata HATA and sometimes witnessed by the commanding officer, Yuhichi
SAKAMOTO,
were a contributing factor in the death of some of the prisoners. The
weaker
prisoners who were subjected to these brutal calisthenics and who later
died
included the following Americans: G. W. Lohman, U. S. Navy, Fernandina,
Florida;
Hank Gottlieb and Peter W. Hansen,
both civilians,
prisoners taken by the Japanese at Wake Island. All of these men after
a
series of these daily calisthenics became so sick that it was
impossible
for them to stand it any longer; they were held in the hospital a short
period
of time, in some cases a week, and then died. Some Englishmen who died
under
the same circumstances were as follows: Trooper T. Hustwick, 7877969,
Wallingford, England, who died 2 August 1945; Gunner J. Dickens,
1700325,
of Rushden, Northampton, England, who died February 9, 1945; Gunner A.
T.
Lyalle, 18333000, of Bristol, England, who died January 22, 1945; and
also
one Australian, S Sgt. P. A. Sims, NX-50743 of New South Wales,
Australia,
who died July 28, 1945. The above-named men and others who died after
May
of 1945 when SAKAMOTO left Fukuoka Camp No. 1 died as a result,
although
delayed, of beatings and deficiencies which occurred during or prior to
May
of 1945 while Yuhichi SAKAMOTO was in charge as commanding officer of
the
camp.
g. Trooper Hustwick, 7877969, English, Wallingford,
England,
was admitted
to the hospital under my supervision approximately in May of 1945. At
that
time his chief complaint was dizziness, extreme weakness and fainting
spells.
He remained in the hospital until about the middle of July 1945 when he
was
discharged by Masato HATA against my advice. The man was returned to
duty
and worked as best he could carrying lumber, each day coming to sick
call
complaining of dizziness, weakness, and fainting. He was brought into
the
hospital in a semi-comatose condition on the evening of the first of
August
1945, for readmittance, and died the morning of the second. About three
days
before he died I saw him as he was forced to engage in the calisthenic
exercises
under the direction of Masato HATA as above described. In his
condition,
with symptoms of dizziness and fainting, he was certainly in no
condition
to do calisthenics, and, in my opinion, although I do not recall
whether
or not he was beaten that day by Masato HATA, his condition was so
aggravated
by the calisthenics, especially when taken with consideration at the
cumulative
effect of calisthenics and beatings over a previous period of time,
that
these calisthenics were a definite factor in causing his death three
days
later.
5. Corporal William Ivarson, a prisoner of war whom I
knew
well at Fukuoka
Prison Camp No. 1, was a man who was on a working party continually. He
reported
to sick call occasionally, but not too frequently. His physical
condition
was fair. By that I mean that he showed evidence of starvation and
malnutrition,
but was otherwise in fair condition. At about two o'clock in the
morning
one day in February 1945 I was called in to give medical treatment to
Ivarson.
When I found him he was unconscious; and although I knew the man I did
not
at first recognize him from his appearance. As soon as I was told who
he
was, I recognised him immediately. I then took his pulse which I found
to
be very rapid; and he looked as though he were going to die. I might
say
at this point that I always had to plead with the Japanese for their
permission
to have men hospitalized. In this instance, by the time I had made
arrangements
with the Japanese for hospitalization of Ivarson he was dead. At this
time
I heard from fellow prisoners whom I knew well and whom I know to be
reliable
that Ivarson received a serious beating from a guard named HONDA,
nicknamed
"The Slob." HONDA, I know from personal experience and observation,
particularly
well because of beatings which he gave me personally, frequently and
regularly
came into the hospital and gave severe beatings to patient under my
care.
I, therefore, have no doubt but what HONDA administered the beating to
Ivarson
as stated above. When I reported the death of Ivarson to Masato HATA
his
answer was, "Yoroshi, yoroshi mina shinda tihen yoroshi" (phonetic)
(Very
good, very good all men die).
6. I recall Tom Holland as a civilian prisoner of war of
the
Japanese who
was taken prisoner by them at Wake Island. I believe that I treated him
for
malnutrition but I do not at this time recall treating him for a
beating.
However, I treated so many patients for beatings that I may have
forgotten
specific treatment I may have given to him.
7. I knew a William Hansen at Fukuoka Prison Camp No. 1,
Japan, from
approximately April 1944 until time of Japanese capitulation. I do not
recall
having treated him for any particularly serious illness or beatings.
8. I met Lt. Colonel Alva Fitch of the Royal Artillery,
British Army, after
our liberation and sometime in September 1945. I know nothing,
therefore,
of medical treatment afforded to Lt. Colonel Fitch in 1945 prior to the
time
I met him.
9. The commanding officer of Fukuoka Camp No. 1 was
named
Yuhichi SAKAMOTO
(phonetic) or Yuhichi SAKOMOTO (phonetic). The two-star private,
medical
orderly, was Masato HATA (phonetic) or Masato HADA (phonetic).
10. I have no further information to add regarding
conditions
or personnel
at Fukuoka Camp No. 1, Kyushu, Japan.
(signed)
Walter A. Kostecki
Major, Medical Corps
WITNESS:
(signed)
T. Howard
Special Agent, SIC
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day of
FEBRUARY
1946. (signed)
Edward A. Frome
(Notary Public)
My commission expires 17 March 1947
Taken at: Hq First Service Command, Boston 15,
Massachusetts
Date: 21 February 1946
In the Presence of: Edward T. Howard
Special Agent, SIC
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT ACTIVITIES IN THE PHILIPPINES
FROM 1941
to 6 MAY 1942,
AND INCLUDING MEDICAL ACTIVITIES
JAPANESE PRISONER OF WAR CAMPS.
by
Colonel Wibb E. Cooper, Medical Corps
(Formerly Surgeon, United States Forces in the Philippines)
Office of the Surgeon General
23 APR 1946
1. INTRODUCTION
As the head of the U.S. Army Medical Department in the
Philippines at the
outbreak of the War with Japan, I feel it is my duty and responsibility
to
make a report to higher authority on the activities of the Medical
Department
during the period of my responsibility.
This is necessarily a narrative report, largely from
memory,
assisted by
medical officers who held key positions in the Medical organization
during
the brief initial campaign in the Philippines.
Several other officers who held important positions and
who
would have been
selected to assist in this report died either during the War or during
captivity
and their records were captured or destroyed. Some records were
recovered
on the recapture of the Philippines, and I feel confident that a
prolonged
study and evaluation of the data from these sources should and will
eventually
be made. I believe a record of achievement was made by our group to
which
we can all look back with pride and confidence that our contribution to
the
war effort under the most trying circumstances measured up to the best
traditions
of the Medical Department.
I wish to give a balanced credit of achievement to the
entire
Medical Department
both during the Philippine Campaign and including the prisoner of war
phase.
The Japanese authorities selected certain medical personnel for medical
work
at the various camps arbitrarily at times. It was a matter then
entirely
out of the hands of the senior Medical officers present and just as in
other
matters of camp administration, the senior line officers had no rank
and
found themselves doing farm work assigned to them by squad leaders,
their
juniors in rank, just so the senior Medical officers were given no
prerogatives
or authority in accordance with their rank.
I know of no group of Medical officers who ever
lived
through such a trying
experience as that capable group of medical prisoners of war trying to
practice
medicine under the supervision of ignorant Japanese soldiers in most
cases,
with practically no medical supplies and equipment -- and they
themselves
often suffering from the same debilitating ailments they were
attempting,
often unsuccessfully, to treat in their fellow prisoners of war.
I feel confident that very soon there should be
available for
publication
in our various medical journals articles by these Medical officers
filled
with firsthand knowledge obtained from the real "crucible of
experience."
These doctors practiced medicine under the most difficult circumstances
possible
and observations made, especially in deficiency diseases, should be of
permanent
value. Malaria, the dysentaries, and deficiency diseases were our main
problems,
both during and following the siege of Bataan and Corregidor.
---------- < cut > ----------
H. Fukuoka Camp #1 [Hakozaki].
The survivors of the death cruise
[Oryoku-maru],
having arrived at Moji, Japan,
January 30th [1945], remained aboard the ship until the morning of
January
31st, at which time they were taken on deck and given an issue of
clothing
consisting of a suit of cotton underwear, a pair of woolen Jap Army
breeches,
a heavy canvas jacket and a pair of tennis shoes. After the clothing
issue
was made, they were taken ashore to an old theater building. The
seriously
ill were the last to be moved and with customary Japanese efficiency
the
cargo net was lowered. This time boards were furnished to make a floor
in
the bottom of the net. A patient was loaded and the attendants stood by
waiting
for him to be lifted out, but soon a Jap sentry appeared with the usual
"hurry
up" and made them load the net with three or four other patients before
they
would raise it. In this manner the hold was cleared of sick and the few
remaining
wounded in short order.
All were taken to the theater building, which was not
heated.
Here most of
that day was spent, while the Japanese busied themselves dividing the
prisoners
into three groups, viz., a hospital group, and two groups of what they
classed
as well men. The writer in the meantime was kept busy signing his name
to
death certificates in blank form to enable the Japanese officer in
charge
of this move to account for his prisoners. Such was the physical state
of
these prisoners upon arrival at Moji that several others died during
the
time that was spent in this theater while the Japanese made up their
rosters.
Finally, when everything was in order, the ambulances came to take the
hospital
group away and while this was in progress the other "well" group was
marched
away, and then the group to which I was attached was marched to the
station,
where it entrained for Fukuoka Camp #1. We were met at the station in
the
town of Kashii by some American prisoners from Wake Island who took us
by
truck to Camp #1. An American, British or Australian Red Cross overcoat
was
issued to each man before entrucking. We arrived in camp well after
dark
and were served a meal of cooked rice, soup, and a warm drink of
Japanese
tea.
The camp at Fukuoka was new and some buildings were
still
under construction.
The framework of these buildings was of native lumber and bamboo with
tar-paper
roofs. The outer walls were of 1/4-inch lumber and were about three
feet
high from the ground to the eaves. The ends were plastered with a red
mud
stuck on a lathing of split bamboo. The floors were sand and only an
open
passageway down the center from one end to the other separated the
sleeping
bays that extended down each side of the building. There was no heat
and
no furniture in the buildings but each man was issued six ersatz
blankets
to use in making his bed and for cover, which was inadequate, but a
better
break than had been expected.
Everyone was allowed to stay in bed for the first week
or ten
days after
our arrival at this camp until one day the Japanese doctor came through
and
made a separate classification of those who were able to be up and
those
who were not. From that time on the "well" men were required to get up
at
6:30 AM and as soon as morning rice was served and the roll call taken,
had
to clear the building and remain outside, except for thirty minutes at
10:00
AM and one hour at noon, until 4:30 PM. It was a strange sight to see
these
ghosts of men out walking to avoid freezing to death. All were so weak
they
could hardly creep and many could only huddle together against the side
of
the building to keep warm. The unconscious and dying and those who
could
not get up under their own power were allowed to remain in their bunks.
After a few days, a representative from headquarters in
Fukuoka came out
to inspect and inquire into our needs and I personally gave him a list
of
the medical supplies that were needed and laid great stress upon the
needs
for additional food, emphasizing that if any Red Cross parcels were
available
they would do us the greatest good now in this our most critical time.
As
a result, this inspection eventually netted us one small Red Cross
package
for each three men, and a smattering of medical supplies, which were
left
under the control of the Japanese doctor and which we were never able
to
get in sufficient quantity even to approach meeting our needs.
After a few more days a Japanese colonel came in to
inspect
the camp, and
after his tour was over word was sent for all Medical officers to
report
to him outside, in the front of the building. This was done, and after
making
a short introductory speech he asked each Medical officer for his
opinion
on what we needed most. The answers were unanimously food and
medicines.
Specific types of food were requested, such as meats, milk, and butter,
and
again Red Cross parcels were requested. His reply was typically
Japanese.
He agreed that we needed everything that was requested, but stated that
these
things were scarce and very difficult to obtain. Replying specifically
to
our request for Red Cross parcels he said, "You are very hungry now and
I
am afraid if we give you these parcels now, you will eat them too
quickly
and waste them and they will do you no good." In reply to a request for
more
blankets he countered with the statement that Japanese soldiers were
given
only five blankets and that we were issued six. It was useless to point
out
that these men had lost all their fatty tissues and were sick men and
therefore
needed more bedding.
There were some cases of Red Cross medicines seen in
camp by
men working
in the Japanese warehouses, but to get any drugs of either Japanese or
American
origin, prescriptions had to be made out and turned in to the Japanese
doctor
for approval. he made these decisions arbitrarily without seeing the
patients
and without so much as consulting the American doctor who submitted
them.
They were usually disapproved or some worthless preparation
substituted.
Even when a prescription was approved, the dose was always reduced to a
noneffective amount. To get around this latter handicap, we tried
putting
in for two patients when only one required the drug, but this proved to
be
of little help. We could not seem to beat the system.
The food ration at this camp consisted of a mixture of
rice
and "koreon"
(a small grain which looked much like milo maize or a cross between
milo
maize and broom corn). The rice was of a type that seemed to be
particularly
hard to digest and the "broom corn seed" seemed to pass through the
human
intestinal tract almost unaltered in its appearance. The soup usually
consisted
of boiled "dikon" (a large white radish) and at the evening meal
frequently
contained a few grams of dried fish. On several occasions a small squid
was
served for each two men. The amount of food received at this camp might
have
been sufficient to maintain weight at its present level had it been a
digestible
type of grain, but certainly no one showed any appreciable gain in
weight.
I was still holding my own at 117 pounds when we left the camp on April
25th
and that weight included considerable edema of the lower extremities.
Some
men at this camp had weights recorded as low as eighty-seven pounds and
survived.
(Example of severe
weight loss at Changi Camp, China, after liberation.)
The diet here was a salt-free diet except for the
natural
salts contained
in the food elements and the craving for salt became almost unbearable,
but
the weather was cold and no disaster resulted. The Japanese realizing
this
salt shortage asked the Americans to submit plans for extracting salt
from
sea water but nothing ever came of it. The following story is cited to
illustrate
the extreme craving for salt: While working on a manure-carrying
detail,
some salt was discovered along the picket line where it had been
spilled
while salting the animals. It was a coarse granular type of salt and
was
picked up with as little manure as possible, taken back to camp where
the
crystals of salt were separated from the manure and dissolved in
boiling
water. This was allowed to stand until the dirt settled out and the
salt
water was decanted off and sterilized by boiling and then used as a
liquid
to season the rice.
Some time in March the Japanese started issuing flour to
bake
bread for the
dysentery patients and this was issued in lieu of the rice and maize
ration,
and although it was too late to benefit most of the serious cases, who
had
already died, it did aid considerably in helping our remaining
dysentery
patients to recover. Bone-marrow broth was served to this group on
three
or four occasions, not frequently enough however to be of any real
value.
Water was plentiful but had to be boiled before it was
potable. This fact
alone made it impossible to get an adequate supply, because of the fuel
shortage.
Consequently, men drank the water directly from the well. It was an
open
shallow well about eight feet to the water level, and not twenty feet
away
was an open sump where feces and urine were mixed in preparation for
putting
it on the vegetable garden. Warning was given not to use this water
unboiled
but little attention was ever paid to that warning.
The death rate at this camp was fairly high. The exact
figures
I do not recall
but it was something like fifty-two deaths out of the group of 192 men
that
came originally to Camp Number 1. These figures may not be exact but I
am
sure they are approximately correct.
On April 25th the groups from the other two camps were
brought
to Fukuoka
and joined us in another cruise from Fukuoka, Japan, to Fusan in Korea.
The
American officer who was with the hospital group has stated that of the
110
men who were sent to the hospital in Moji only thirty had survived. No
information on deaths was obtained from the other group and the first
group
was separated from them upon arrival in Fusan. They were sent to
Manchuria
and the first group was sent on to
Jinsen
in Korea. At the docks in Fukuoka an American Medical officer
was called
upon to see an officer who was in a dying condition from pneumonia. The
Japanese
doctor there gave the Medical officer medicine for him and some
morphine
to ease his pain. Before the officer died that night he was asked
whether
he had been forced to come on this move or had come by choice. His
reply
was that the Japs would not authorize him to remain in Fukuoka. This is
a
typical instance of how men were moved from place to place when it was
evident
that they were in no condition to survive the move. I do not recall
ever
making an overnight move from Bataan to Korea when some dead were not
left
somewhere along the route.
The Japanese doctor who gave the medicine at the docks
in
Fukuoka turned
out to be the one from Mukden of whom so many good things have been
reported.
Ironically enough he was not taken prisoner by the American forces but
was
in the zone occupied by our Allies.
I.
Lee Affidavits
British Bombardier Lee has a very good description of what it was like
at
the first location of Camp #1 in Kumamoto. Lee later worked at the Red
Cross
supply warehouse in Fukuoka and gives a first-hand account of what
happened
to the medical supplies: "A very small percentage was issued
to the various
camps. The remainder was destroyed when the Americans bombed Hakata in
June
1945." He also tells of the hard working conditions during
runway
construction at the airport, and the sad fate of some 40 men who died
of
pneumonia, mainly because of the harsh conditions in which they lived
--
the state of constantly being wet in their huts during the rainy
season.
Lee Affidavits
J.
Goodpasture Check List
Captain Goodpasture's Check List was used as one of the primary sources
for
the Gibbs Report.
Goodpasture relates
how his life was saved by a Red Cross parcel, how they sometimes slept
between
the coffins of their dead camp mates, and that "the Fukuokan camp was
without
question, excepting the hell ships, the worst experience of all."
Goodpasture
Check List
K. Memorandum
re Photos of Hakozaki Camp
I have yet to find the photographs mentioned
below.
They could be buried somewhere in other Fukuoka files at the National
Archives. I wish I knew where.
MEMORANDUM: 7 January 1946
SUBJECT: Captions for pictures taken in and around POW
Camp 1,
of the Fukuoka
POW Hqs., at Hakozaki
TO: Lt. Col. Richard E. Rudisill, Chief, Investigation
Division
Herewith submitted, is a list of the captions of the
pictures
taken at POW
Camp 1, Hakozaki, of the Fukuoka POW Base Camp Hqs. during the course
of
our investigation of war crimes committed at that camp:
Pack Number 1
Picture No.
1) Solitary confinement cell in which HARRISON was kept. Four similar
cells.
2) Officers' Quarters (POW)
3) Interior of the POW barracks
4) Interior of the dispensary
5) Interior of the kitchen
6) Bathhouse. Four tubs for the entire camp
7) Camp latrines, adjacent to the garden.
8) Garden cesspool, and background of the camp
9) Well in back of the kitchen
10) Washroom
11) Mosquito bar, one to each barracks
12) Pig pen within the camp site
Pack Number 2
Picture No.
1) Lumber yard (Job site of most POW)
2) Saw mill (In lumber yard)
3) Fukuoka city crematory
4) Exterior view of the crematory
5) Grave of 100 POW at Fujisaki Cemetery
6) Kyushu Imperial Univ. Hosp. Exterior view.
7) Interior view of the hosp. ward where POW were kept after the
cessation of hostilities.
8) Chicken coop in the camp site
9) General view of the camp interior
10) Exterior view of Camp Number 1.
CHARLES V. RAMEY, 1st. Lt. CE
Investigating Officer
Legal Section GHQ, SCAP
IV. Rosters
The TIFF images below have not been through OCR (optical character
recognition)
and completely put into text files yet due to the poor image and page
format.
The rosters were compiled at the end of the war and therefore list the
names
of POWs who were present at the camp at the time of liberation. There
are
a total of 379 names:
American: 152
British: 139
Dutch: 58
Australian: 28
Canadian: 1
Norwegian: 1
American A-F
(57K)
American F-K
(64K)
American K-S
(64K)
American S-Y
(61K)
British A-D
(75K)
British E-L
(93K)
British L-S
(65K)
British S-W
(68K)
Dutch A-M
(53K)
Dutch M-Z
(34K)
Australian
(46K)
Canadian
&
Norwegian (7K)
The first roster lists the names, ranks and terms of employment for
personnel
at the Main Office of POW Camp Headquarters (located within the Western
Army
HQ in Jonai, next to Maizuru Park; responsible for all POW camps in
Kyushu).
The second roster lists the names, ranks and terms of employment for
personnel
at all Camp #1 locations.
MEMBERS OF THE FORMER PRISONER OF WAR
CAMP NO. 1, MAIN OFFICE, FUKUOKA
NAME |
RANK |
TERM |
Sugazawa, Iju |
Col. |
Jan 1943 - Jul 1944 |
Fukumoto, Manjiro |
Col. |
Jul 1944 - Oct 1945 |
Kitajima, Riichi |
Maj. |
Jan 1943 - Aug 1943 |
Tokashiki, Isho |
Capt. |
Jan 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Inouye, Teshimune |
1st Lt. (Med) |
Jan 1943 - Apr 1944 |
Kochi, Masao |
1st Lt. (Acc) |
Jan 1943 - Aug 1945 |
Maekawa, Tozo |
1st Lt. (Med) |
May 1944 - May 1945 |
Watanabe, Tadao |
1st Lt. (Acc) |
Aug 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Uchimi, Yoshihide |
1st Lt. (Acc) |
Oct 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Rikitake, Yaichi |
Maj. |
Aug 1943 - May 1944 |
Kitano, Toshio |
Maj. |
May 1944 - Aug 1945 |
Omaru, Iseki |
2nd Lt. |
Aug 1943 - Aug 1944 |
Nishimura, Tomotaka |
2nd Lt. (Acc) |
Sep 1943 - Jul 1944 |
Yuri, Kei |
1st. Lt. |
May 1944 - Oct 1945 |
Ogami, Keisaburo |
Capt. (Med) |
May 1945 - Oct 1945 |
Nishihara, Suemitsu |
Wrnt. Off. (Acc) |
Apr 1943 - Mar 1944 |
Amakubo, Asaichi |
Wrnt. Off. |
Jan 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Sendo, Toshio |
Sgt. Maj. |
Jan 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Ikeda, Hisao |
Sgt. Maj. |
Dec 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Endo, Takasuke |
Sgt. Med. |
Jan 1943 - Dec 1943 |
Sasaki, Tetsuo |
Sgt. Med. |
Dec 1943 - Aug 1945 |
Kanda, Masami |
Sgt. Med. |
Aug 1945 - Oct 1945 |
Sasaki, Hayao |
Sgt. |
May 1944 - Nov 1944 |
Kurata, Kazuo |
Cpl. |
Jan 1943 - Jun 1943 |
Uchida, Toshiharu |
Sgt. |
Jan 1943 - Feb 1943 |
Teshima, Kaname |
Sgt. |
Dec 1943 - Oct 1945 |
Shinkai, Toshio |
Sgt. |
May 1945 - Oct 1945 |
Saito, Kaneo |
Sgt. Maj. |
Jul 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Tamuro, Takashi |
Sgt. |
Aug 1943 - Jul 1944 |
Iwakiri, Chuze |
Sgt. Maj. |
Sep 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Tomita, Kinsaku |
Sgt. Maj. (accounts) |
Jul 1945 - Oct 1945 |
Fujita, Shigeo |
Cpl. |
Apr 1945 - Oct 1945 |
Karakasa, Shigenori |
Sgt. (accounts) |
Aug 1944 - Oct 1945 |
Yanagawa, Takeji |
Cpl. (accounts) |
Dec 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Yamaguchi, Kiyoshige |
Cpl. (medical) |
Aug 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Kataoka, Keiichi |
Sgt. Maj. (accounts) |
Dec 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Uchida, Shozo |
Sgt. (accounts) |
Dec 1943 - Jan 1944 |
Takenaka, Shoichiro |
Cpl. (accounts) |
Sep 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Shimokawa, Tamezo |
Sgt. Maj. (medical) |
Dec 1944 - Mar 1945 |
Sakami, Misao |
Sgt. (accounts) |
Mar 1944 - Aug 1944 |
Terata, Masaichi |
Sgt. (medical) |
Jan 1943 - Aug 1944 |
Kunihiro, Yoshitake |
Cpl. (medical) |
Aug 1944 - Dec 1944 |
Shinohara, Kotaro |
Cpl. |
Jul 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Togawa, Shogo |
Pvt. |
Jan 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Ishibashi, Takeji |
Pvt. |
Jan 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Nakano, Takeichi |
Pvt. |
Jan 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Nakao, Masayoshi |
Pvt. |
Jan 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Noguchi, Yoshitaka |
Pvt. |
Jan 1943 - Jan 1945 |
Shirozu, Nobuharu |
2nd Lt. (accounts) |
May 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Hara, Daizo |
2nd Lt. (accounts) |
Aug 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Maeda, Tamizo |
Pvt. |
Jan 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Kusumoto, Tsugio |
Pvt. |
Jan 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Kunisaki, Takamasa |
Pvt. |
Jan 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Imura, Naotaka |
Pvt. |
Jan 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Yamanaka, Sumiyoshi |
Pvt. |
Aug 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Hata, Masato |
Pvt. (Med) |
Jan 1943 - Jun 1943 |
Tsuji, Totsuji |
Pvt. (Med) |
Jan 1943 - Apr 1943 |
Ando, Tatsuo |
Pvt. (Med) |
Jan 1943 - Dec 1944 |
Shiota, Masaru |
Pvt. (Med) |
Dec 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Natajima, Yutaka |
Pvt. (Med) |
Mar 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Koyama, Kazuma |
Pvt. (Med) |
Mar 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Watanabe, Yasutaro |
Interpreter |
Mar 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Mino, Masaru |
Interpreter |
Apr 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Akiyama, Fukujiro |
Interpreter |
Dec 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Asano, Yukio |
Interpreter |
Feb 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Abe, Yokoichi |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Iwakuma, Takashi |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Mitarai, Masao |
Employee |
Apr 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Nakano, Tadashi |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - Sep 1945 |
MEMBERS OF THE FORMER PRISONER
OF WAR
CAMP NO. 1, FUKUOKA
NAME |
RANK |
TERM |
Sakamoto, Yuhichi |
Capt. |
Jan 1943 - Jun 1945 |
Yoshii, Toruo |
Capt. |
Jun 1945 - Present |
Makita, Satoru |
2nd Lieut. (Medical) |
Jan 1943 - Nov 1943 |
Inouye, Toshimmo |
1st Lieut. (Medical) |
Dec 1943 - Apr 1944 |
Maekawa, Toza |
1st Lieut. (Medical) |
Apr 1944 - May 1945 |
Kanda, Masaichi |
1st Lieut. (Medical) |
May1944 - Feb 1945 |
Danno, Kazuo |
1st Lieut. (Medical) |
Feb 1945 - May 1945 |
Ogami, Koisaburo |
1st Lieut. (Medical) |
May 1945 - Aug 1945 |
Oyama, Mitsuo |
2nd Lieut. |
Aug 1945 - Present |
Iwakiri, Chuzo |
Sgt. Maj. |
Jan 1943 - Dec 1943 |
Kakuyama, Sadao |
Warrant Officer |
Jan 1943 - Nov 1944 |
Tomita, Kinsaku |
Sgt. Maj. (Acc) |
Jan 1943 - Jul 1945 |
Mozumi, Masakatsu |
Sgt. |
Sept 1943 - Jul 1944 |
Murata, Kazuo |
Sgt. |
May 1944 - Jul 1944 |
Uomi, Takezo |
Cpl. |
Jul 1944 - Jun 1945 |
Endo, Takasuke |
Sgt. Maj. (Medical) |
Jan 1943 - Apr 1943 |
Taniguchi, Tsumoru |
Sgt. Maj. (Medical) |
May 1943 - Nov 1944 |
Yamanishi, Michiaki |
Sgt. Maj. (Medical) |
Dec 1944 - Mar 1945 |
Kiyohara, Shigemi |
Sgt. (Medical) |
Mar 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Moritake, Susumu |
Sgt. Maj. |
Nov 1944 - Feb 1945 |
Ono, Ryuzo |
Cpl. |
Mar 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Kunimatsu, Daijiro |
Cpl. |
Jul 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Kataoka, Koichi |
Sgt. Maj. (accounts) |
Jul 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Katsura, Takeo |
Pvt. (Interpreter) |
Jan 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Okura, Kazumasa |
Pvt. |
May 1944 -Jun 1945 |
Wada, Yoichi |
Pvt. |
May 1944 -Jun 1945 |
Nove, Hiroshi |
Pvt. |
May 1944 - Jun 1945 |
Oki, Yasushi |
Pvt. |
May 1944 - Jan 1945 |
Noda, Kasu |
Pvt. |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Takagi, Natsumi |
Pvt. |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Kojo, Hiroji |
Pvt. |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Torata, Masaichi |
Pvt. (Medical) |
Jan 1943 - Sep 1943 |
Hata, Masato |
Pvt. (Medical) |
Sep 1943 - Mar 1945 |
Hashimoto, Morio |
Pvt. (Medical) |
Mar 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Masuda, Taiichi |
Pvt. (Medical) |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Tanouye, Kinzo |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Ganaha, Sooi |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Fujisaka, |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - Feb 1944 |
Ijima, Kiyoto |
Employee |
Mar 1943- Nov 1943 |
Wada, Kosaji |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - Aug 1944 |
Ude, Hirotake |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - Jul 1944 |
Uyoda, Cheji |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - May 1944 |
Miyawaki, Mitsuyuki |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Jun 1944 |
Watanabe, Toru |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - May 1944 |
Koyara, Masakatsu |
Employee |
Apr 1943 - Sep 1943 |
Isahaya, Masani |
Employee |
Apr 1943 - Sep 1943 |
Fuchiso, Kiyoshi |
Employee |
Jun 1943 - Mar 1944 |
Mori, Toshio |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - May 1944 |
Saruwatari, Kunio |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - May 1944 |
Araki, Yoshiki |
Employee |
Jul 1943 - Jun 1945 |
Honda, Hajime |
Employee |
Mar 1943 - Jun 1945 |
Hirano, Jirokichi |
Employee |
Apr 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Matsunaga, Shigenori |
Employee |
Feb 1943 - Sep 1945 |
Komori, Yasuo |
Employee |
Feb 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Kuga, Suyotaugu |
Employee |
Mar 1944 - Sep 1945 |
Maesuahith, Yoshio |
Employee |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
Harano, Tsuruo |
Employee |
Jun 1945 - Sep 1945 |
For a list of B- and C-class war criminals who were
at Kyushu camps,
see Summary of Japanese
War Crime Tribunal
sentencing of Japanese personnel in Fukuoka Camp Group.
(Japanese
chart)
UPDATE: See POW and Civilian Camps throughout Japanese Empire for an estimate of all POW and internee camps in Japan and Asia Pacific areas under Imperial control. From "Relief of Prisoners of War and Internees" are the following helpful tables:
Compilation of statistics used at Tokyo War Crimes trials:
Commonwealth POW Statistics Japan Europe 1946 - Asst. stats for UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, with comparison of POWs in Europe
Per Horyoshuyojo Minkanjin-Yokuryujo Jiten (Encyclopedia of POW Camps and Civilian Internment Camps), 2023:
During the Pacific War, 130 POW camps were built in Japan, where about 36,000 Allied POWs
were brought to work in coal mines, construction sites, and other
locations due to a shortage of labor. In addition, some civilians who
were nationals of countries that had declared war on Japan were
detained as "enemy aliens" and held in 29 civilian internment camps throughout Japan.
The death rate of Allied POWs
is reported to be about 30%, but this figure includes the number of
POWs who died outside of Japan, and the average death rate in domestic
POW camps is about 10%. One of the reasons for the high number of POW deaths is that the U.S. military attacked and sank 24 of the 69 transport ships carrying POWs," he noted.
Civilian Internment Camps
Per The Internment of Western Civilians under the Japanese 1941-1945 by Bernice Archer (2004):
The Japanese created
hundreds of civilian internment camps in Japan, Korea, Manchuria,
China, French Indo China, Thailand, Hong Kong, Republic of the
Philippines, Burma, Singapore, Sumatra, Java, West Borneo, East Borneo,
and the Celebes. The camps themselves differed enormously.
Over 130,000 Allied civilians interned (an estimated 50,740 men, 41,895 women and 40,260 children), with approximately 15,000 deaths.
The smallest camp, Pangkalpinang in Sumatra, held approximately four
people. The largest, Tjihapit I in Java, held around 14,000 Dutch women
and children. There were initially approximately 114 civilian camps in
Java, 93 in Sumatra alone (reduced later to only nine).
|
The chart below, compiled from a variety of sources, compares POW death
rates
among all nationalities in both German and Japanese POW camps. It is
interesting
to note the differences in figures and percentages. I found the
statement
by Linda Holmes in her book, Unjust
Enrichment, quite surprising:
To compare the fates of American
prisoners
held in the two major theaters of war from 1941 to 1945, nearly 40
percent of U.S. military prisoners died in Japanese captivity, while
just over 1 percent of American POWs died in Nazi hands. Nine
out of ten prisoners who died in World War II perished while in
Japanese custody.
Here's a piece from
the
Australian War Memorial
home page:
Over 22,000 members of the
Australian
armed services and more than 500 Australian civilians spent over three
and a half years in Japanese prisoner-of-war or internment camps in
locations throughout Japanese-controlled Asia and the East Indies.
In all, some 13,872 Australian
prisoners
of war were recovered from Japanese captivity at the end of the war. Of
those taken prisoner in 1941 and 1942, approximately 7,777 died in
captivity - 35 per cent. As the Australian official history notes, this
represented nearly three times the number killed in battle in, for
example, the 9th Australian Division during its four campaigns. The
prisoner-of-war deaths represented half of all those Australians who
died in the war against Japan. By comparison, 7,116 Australians became
prisoners of the Germans or Italians, of whom 582 - eight per cent -
died in captivity.
"It was 17.5% more deadly to be a prisoner of the
Japanese
than to fight
against them in battle."
Statistics on POWs of the Japanese
American POWs Held in WWII
Military
There were 130,201 US military personnel captured and
interned in
WWII. As of January 1, 2000, 38,114 were still alive (29.2%). Of the
total count of US POWs in WWII, 36,260 were captured and interned by
the Japanese. On January 1, 2000, 5,745 were still alive (15.8%). Here
is the grim news -- the comparison of those military held by Germany and
Japan.
|
By Nazis |
% |
By Japanese |
% |
Captured and
Interned:
|
93,941
|
---
|
36,260
|
---
|
Died While POW:
|
1,121
|
1.1%
|
13,851
|
38.2%
|
Alive on Jan. 1, 2000:
|
44,773
|
47.6%
|
5,745
|
15.8%
|
Civilian
There were 18,745 US civilians captured and
interned in
WWII. As of January 1, 2000, 3,018 were still alive (16.1%). Of the
total civilian POWs in WWII, 13,996 were captured and interned by the
Japanese. On January 1, 1999, only 1,497 were still alive (10.7%).
Again, here are the grim statistics -- the comparison of US civilians
interned by Germany versus those held by Japan.
|
By Nazis |
% |
By Japanese |
% |
Captured and
Interned:
|
4,746
|
---
|
13,996
|
---
|
Died While POW:
|
168
|
3.5%
|
1,536
|
11%
|
Alive on Jan. 1, 2000:
|
1,521
|
32%
|
1,497
|
10.7%
|
Source: AXPOW Association,
March
15, 2000
"The Veterans Administration reports
that
46,417 ex-prisoners-of-war were alive as of January 1, 2001. The
numbers of living Ex-POWs is dwindling rapidly. The number living as of
January 1, 1998, was 55,999. Clearly our numbers are decreasing at well
over 3000 per year and this rate is accelerating." -- Wally
Nelson, EX-POW Bulletin, June 2001
Behind Bamboo: American
POWs in
the Pacific
Estimated number captured, died and
returned
to U.S. control.
Captured by Country
Philippines: 22,000
Wake Island :1,555
Java (Indonesia): 890
Guam: 400
Japan & elsewhere :300
Celebes (Indonesia): 255
China: 200
Total :25,600
Killed or Died in Captivity by
Country
Philippines: 5,135
On prison ships: 3,840
Japan: 1,200
Manchuria (China): 175
Burma: 130
Wake Island: 100
Korea: 70
Total :10,650
POWs Liberated by Country
Japan: 11,400
Philippines: 1,500
Manchuria (China): 1,200
Burma-Thailand: 480
Celebes (Indonesia): 200
Korea: 150
China: 20
Total: 14,950
Source: Surrender and Survival: The
Experience of American POWs in the Pacific by E. Bartlett
Kerr, 1985
From Japanese Statistics
POWs
Held
by the Japanese Military
(as of June 7, 1942) |
American Forces |
15,000 |
British Forces |
64,000
(includes 1,600 Canadians
and 17,000 Australians)
|
Dutch East Indies Forces |
24,000 |
Chungking Army |
44,000
|
Other |
185,000
(includes Chungking Army Burmese POWs
and unknown nationalities; most of the ~100,000 Indonesian soldiers
were released)
|
Total |
242,000
(through 5/31)
|
Source:
Documents
Relating to Treatment of Prisoners of War, Research Institute
of Ministry of Health & Welfare, June 10, 1942
NOTES: Total is obviously not correct. Totals for POWs on Chinese
mainland rose from 50,100 in 1940 to 104,700 in 1941. |
Country |
White
POWs |
Total |
Notes |
Officer |
Other Ranks |
Britain |
4,809 |
41,518 |
46,327 |
|
Holland
(European) |
2,357 |
21,211 |
23,568 |
|
Australia |
987 |
15,814 |
16,801 |
|
United States |
456 |
5,184 |
5,640 |
10,633(1) |
Canada |
73 |
1,611 |
1,684 |
|
New Zealand |
22 |
52 |
74 |
|
South Africa |
17 |
15 |
32 |
|
Other |
5 |
216 |
221 |
1,706(2)
+591(3)
3,890(4) |
Total |
8,726 |
85,621 |
94,347 |
11,167(5) |
(1)
US
soldiers captured in the Philippines
(2) Captured in Burma; believed to include British and Chinese
soldiers, and Burmese
(3) POWs in New Guinea; believed to include British soldiers
and natives
(4) POWs in Borneo; believed to include British and Dutch
soldiers, and natives
(5) This figure increased to a total of 125,309 white POWs
per August 1942 edition of Horyo Geppo (POW Monthly Bulletin),
(pub. 9/10/1942) |
Country |
Non-White POWs |
Nationality |
Previously Released |
Release Date
(through 8/1942) |
Philippines |
42,539
(as of 7/20) |
Filipino |
4,167(1) |
6/9~7/20 |
Malaya |
71,319
2,700
0
|
Indian
Indonesian
Malayan
|
---
1,080
11
|
(2)
5/11~6/22 |
Java |
15,962
(as of 8/10)
|
Indonesian
|
18,151
|
--- |
Burma |
1,730
0
|
Indian
Burmese
|
---
1,000
|
---
|
British Borneo |
561
369
|
Indian
Indonesian
|
---
|
Scheduled release not implemented |
Hong Kong |
1,856
110
5 |
Indian
Chinese
Other
|
---
|
--- |
Shanghai |
25 |
Chinese
|
---
|
Interned w/o release |
(1)
Nearly
6,000 family members, patients and nurses connected with the Philippine
military operation were to be released
(2) 36,200 not released; some utilized for quarry? work, others
dispersed among military
Source: August 1942 edition of Horyo Geppo (POW Monthly
Bulletin), POW Bureau |
Nationality |
Total POWs |
POW Deaths |
Death Rate (%) |
British |
50,016
{52,000}
|
12,433
{14,500}
|
24.8%
{28%}
|
Dutch
(European) |
37,000 |
8,500 |
22.9% |
Australian |
21,726
[22,376]
|
7,412
[8,031]
|
34.1%
[35.9%]
|
American |
21,580 |
7,107 |
32.9% |
Canadian |
1,691 |
273 |
16.1% |
New Zealander |
121 |
31 |
25.6% |
Total |
132,134 |
35,756 |
27.1% |
Source: Horyo
Saishu
Ronkoku Fuzoku-sho B, Feb. 19, 1948
Figures in braces are estimates; in brackets from Australian War Memorial
Comparative
statistic for
Japanese prisoners of war held in the Soviet Union: Out of
575,000 internees, 55,000 died in captivity, a death rate of 9.6%.
For a statistical comparison, see POW STRENGTH FIGURES AS REPORTED BY MID, which show the numbers of POWs our military intelligence estimated were in camps in late 1944.
The IMTFE War Crimes Trials produced some statistics on deaths in the Pacific area: War Crimes Death Victims (Doc. 2885 Exhibit 1358).
The Naval History and Heritage Command has some very good basic information on POW and internee numbers: U.S. Prisoners of War and Civilian
American Citizens Captured and Interned by Japan in World War II: The
Issue of Compensation by Japan by Gary K. Reynolds, Information Research Specialist (2002)
Straight from the National Archives and Japan Archives:
In an effort to find finality
on
POWs statistics, I refer the reader to Chapter 9 in Van Waterford's
excellent work of research, Prisoners of the Japanese in
World War II -- "Out of about 1 million
captives, well over one-third died -- a needlessly
and tragically high figure."
For
further research into this matter of statistics, I recommend R.J.
Rummel's most imformative work, Statistics
Of Japanese Democide -- Estimates, Calculations, And Sources.
Of special note is the Table
dealing with POW figures. Regarding POW numbers, Rummel writes:
The overall number of POWs
and
internees killed was about 138,000 (line 93). Since
this is largely based on official figures released shortly after the
war, I give no high and low. For nations releasing figures on both the
total number of POWs captured and the number dying in Japanese
captivity, the POW death rate averaged nearly 29 percent.
Japanese Camps
for War
Prisoners
(From Our War
Correspondent, James O'Connor)
MANILA, Sunday.
Of more than 200,000 persons
captured by the Japanese, half are British, a third American and the
remainder Dutch. It is estimated that a quarter died in Internment and
that 10,000 have been either repatriated or liberated.
During last Spring some
75,000
prisoners of war and 60,000 civilian internees were held in Japan, up
to 40,000 being located in 100 camps, Including 14,000 British, 10,000
Americans, nearly 8,000 Australians, 5,000 Dutch and 1,000 Canadians.
Held in a camp near Tokyo are
about
80 women, mainly Catholic Sisters from America.
The representative of the
American
Red Cross stated that while no reliable information was to hand in
recent months it could be presumed that conditions had deteriorated
owing to the Allied blockade, but those in Japan proper appeared to be
better off, as far as food is concerned, than those in the outer
periphery.
Military and civilian
internees
were also held in Korea, Manchuria, and Formosa, while there were camps
at Shanghai, Peking, Hong-kong, Thailand, Indo-China, Malaya and the
N.E.I.
About 1,000 English and
Australians
were Interned at Kaigo in Japan. The few thousands still remaining in
Malaya are mostly British and Dutch.
The Canberra Times,
Monday 20 August 1945
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