<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="22" > tortured Britons</h1>
In the dimly lit basement, with smoke and the smell of roasted meat in the air, a close look revealed a naked man strapped to an iron chair in the center of the room, next to three soldiers in military uniforms.
The man tied to the chair had his head hanging down to his chest, his long dirty hair covering his face like a rag, and the corners of his mouth and chin were constantly dripping with blood.
The officer standing in front of the poor prisoner, with a cigarette in his hand, asked the inquest what the inquisitor was in distinctly Oriental English, and the prisoner groaned in pain, as if muttering something, and the interrogator immediately bent down and broke the man's head, his ears close together, trying to discern what the Englishman was saying.
Moments later, the interrogator suddenly stood up and yelled at the Englishman, "You want to fool us again? Do you think we don't know anything? Whether you say it or not! ”
Then he said something in Japanese to a man next to him, who took out a large wooden stick (like a wolf's tooth stick) with thick and thin barbs, walked up to the prisoner's back, and slammed it on his naked back, accompanied by the blunt sound of the stick touching the flesh, and the prisoner made a miserable cry.
Every time the stick was swung down and left, tiny beads of blood splashed from the flesh, and after a dozen strokes, the interrogator told the torturer to stop, then interrogated the prisoner again, and ordered his men to continue after not getting the desired result.
The torture went on and on and on, and finally the officer, who had no answer, poked the burning cigarette in his hand into the lower body of the prisoner, and the terrible screams of the men echoed in the basement, and the stench of burnt hair and flesh.
Such horrific scenes, during world war II, in the Japanese occupation zone, were repeated in large numbers every day, and for the captives and rebels, this barbaric terrorist organization under the Japanese militarist government will use the most inhuman and inhuman torture to keep them shut up forever.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="25" > the composition and functions of the Japanese Gendarmerie</h1>
This organization in Southeast Asia that made Britain and the United States talk about discolored and fearful was the notorious Japanese gendarmerie, and British and American agents and soldiers would rather commit suicide than fall into the hands of the gendarmerie.
This organization is composed of a group of Japanese extremist militarists who like to use the most brutal and bloody torture to pry open the mouths of captives and obtain the information they want, not only to make their opponents feel fear, but also to use "cruel perverts" as populist Japanese people and soldiers, when talking about the gendarmerie, "no one wants to deal with them," the former Japanese Army officer of World War II commented.

Heinrich Himmler
It can be understood that the Japanese Gendarmerie was a special police organization, very similar to the Gestapo of Nazi Germany. However, compared with the Gestapo created by Heinrich Himmler, it is much larger in terms of functions and powers, and further comparisons we will find that the Japanese gendarmerie not only has the characteristics of the Gestapo, but also has similarities with other Nazi German police organizations such as the Reich Security Directorate, the most important intelligence agency of Nazi Germany, and the Military Police Force of the Wehrmacht.
Nazi secret police force – the Gestapo
At the same time, prisoner-of-war camps and civilian camps were under the jurisdiction of the Japanese Gendarmerie, and these camps were more vicious and brutal than the concentration camps in Himmler.
The Gendarmerie was also an important propaganda brainwashing tool for Nazi Japan, with institutions with the same functions as the department under Neseff Goebbels in Berlin.
Neissef Goebbels – Nazi propaganda minister
And that's not all, the gendarmerie also has secret agencies within it that conduct biological and chemical warfare experiments, and human experiments of all kinds are commonplace for them, and their humanity is as dehumanizing as the human experiments performed by Joseph Mengele and other SS doctors at Auschwitz.
Joseph Mengele (human experiments underway)
The Japanese Gendarmerie also had a specially trained and well-equipped assault unit, very similar to the SS commanded by Otto Skolzny.
Otto Skolzny – known as Europe's number one villain
(Note: The SS commandos successfully rescued the Italian dictator Mussolini imprisoned on the Grand Sasso In 1943, and slipped through the Allied lines of defense in Belgium by pretending to be American gendarmes at the Battle of the Ardennes in 1944.)
In the Pacific Theater, the first successful Japanese landing operation in Australia was carried out by the gendarmerie commandos.
On the battlefield of World War II, behind every prisoner of war concentration camp and every city occupied by the Japanese army, there are the shadows of the Japanese gendarmerie, their tentacles are everywhere, barbarism and brutality are their signatures, they call "one of the most bloody and tyrannical institutions in history", as if using the most cruel torture to destroy opponents can make these crazy people get the most joyful enjoyment, so I call them - torture apostles, after all, in their eyes, only the most inhuman criminal law to torture opponents, in order to obtain a climax in the body and soul.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="26" > the origin of the Japanese gendarmerie</h1>
Group photo of officers of the Japanese Gendarmerie
(Note: The collar badge color of the officers of the Japanese Gendarmerie is black, which is different from the red collar badge of other officers of the army, which also highlights the special status of the Gendarmerie in the Japanese army system)
Unlike the Nazi Gestapo in Hiram, the Japanese Gendarmerie has a much longer history.
It was founded in 1881 at a time when Japanese rulers were eager to pull the country's institutions and economic militaries into the orbit of modernization and Westernization.
Emperor Muhito – also known as Emperor Meiji
Thirteen years before the establishment of the gendarmerie, in 1868, a "bloody revolution" ended the closed, ignorant and backward shogunate rule, and at this time, Emperor Muhito, who had once again become the de facto supreme ruler of the country, launched the "Meiji Restoration" movement aimed at enriching the country and strengthening the army and dividing the world with the great powers.
After the beginning of the Meiji Restoration, Japan began to learn from Western countries on a large scale in terms of economy, military, and politics, and introduced Western systems, but this touched the dissatisfaction of the old samurai class, and they launched several rebellions, although they were thwarted by the newly formed Imperial Japanese Army, but they still caused some damage to the new Japanese government, especially the satsuma family rebellion that broke out in 1877, which seriously affected the legislative branch of the government.
Japanese Admiral Heihachiro Higashigo
(At the end of the Satsuma Domain, the strong domain of the Japanese shogunate, the backbone of the fallen curtain movement, advocating the return of power to the emperor, the real power figures in the Japanese navy after the Meiji Restoration were all from satsuma domain, so that the Japanese army had the saying "Choshu army, Satsuma's navy", the most famous of which was the Japanese admiral Higashigo Heihachirō.) )
At this time, the Japanese government realized that they needed a modern army that could control the people at home, suppress rebellion, and fight abroad, so the Japanese gendarmerie corps came into being, modeled on the French Gendarmerie Corps.
At the end of the 19th century, the Japanese Gendarmerie was a small organization of less than 400 people, with the General Affairs Department and the Operations Department.
The internal departments were responsible for policy formulation, personnel management, internal discipline, liaison with government departments, etc., while the operations departments were responsible for stationing military police organizations within the Imperial Army, as well as maintaining public safety and gathering intelligence.
With the victory of the Sino-Japanese Sino-Japanese War and the Russo-Japanese War, Japan's influence in Asia has risen steadily, and the tasks undertaken by the gendarmerie have become more and more important, and as the Japanese army has begun to strengthen its rule in Korea, the gendarmerie has also ushered in its first overseas mission - the assassination of Empress Myungseong of Korea, and I will tell in the next article how the Japanese gendarmerie tortured and killed Empress Myungseong of Korea.
Today's article ends here, welcome to like the message forward, thank you.