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World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

author:Visible history
World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

In April 1942, American soldiers surrendering to the Japanese at Mariveles Naval Base in bataan, Philippines. No one expected that the surrendered American troops would be greeted by a miserable Bataan march.

World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

Japanese soldiers escorted a large number of prisoners of war, and the number of U.S.-Philippine coalition troops who surrendered was about 78,000

World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

The prisoners were filmed during the Bataan Death March in April 1942, with their hands tied behind their backs.

World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

After the philippines surrendered on April 9, 1942, captured U.S. troops and Filipino soldiers marched on the road. Start the march on foot from Milestone 167, two miles east of Mariveles Airport, to the Oudner concentration camp, 120 kilometers away. The nearly 80,000 people were forcibly escorted to a prisoner-of-war camp 120 kilometers away, known as the Bataan March.

World War II old photos Of the brutal Bataan March A bloody case created by the Japanese army

The PRISONERs had no food or water along the way, and were stabbed, shot and mistreated by the Japanese along the way, in which about 15,000 people died. This Bataan march was a bloody case in the Far East by brutal Japanese soldiers.

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