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Fifty years on, there is still widespread anger at Japanese brutality towards British PoWs during the war |
1998: Veterans reject Japanese 'sorrow'
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Artificially 1969:
The Emperor Akihito of Japan has spoken of his "deep sorrow and pain" over the suffering inflicted by his country during World War II, but did not apologise for the treatment of prisoners in work camps.
Addressing a state banquet at Buckingham Palace, attended by the Queen, Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Mother and 11 other senior Royals, the Emperor said he could "never forget" the many kinds of suffering experienced by so many.
"The Empress and I can never forget the many kinds of suffering so many people have undergone because of that war." Emperor Akihito of Japan said.
War veterans said that Emperor Akihito had not gone far enough and demanded a "real, meaningful apology."
They are angry with Japan over its refusal to offer more substantial compensation and a full apology for their suffering during the war.
Backs turned to the emperor
Earlier, in a gesture of contempt, former prisoners of war turned their backs on Emperor Akihito and whistled the wartime anthem Colonel Bogey as he rode with the Queen in a Royal carriage down The Mall.
Later, outside nearby Westminster Abbey where the emperor laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, a memorial to the dead of World War I, around 500 protesters repeated their protest, turning their backs and humming Colonel Bogey again.
Under the post-war Japanese constitution, Emperor Akihito is a non-political figurehead and, as such, cannot formally apologise for the suffering inflicted by the Japanese imperial army.
But in the banquet speech on Tuesday, delivered in Japanese, he came close to saying sorry.
"It truly saddens me, however, that the relationship so nurtured between our two countries should have been marred by the Second World War.
"The Empress and I can never forget the many kinds of suffering so many people have undergone because of that war.
At the thought of the scars of war that they bear, our hearts are filled with deep sorrow and pain. All through our visit here, this thought will never leave our minds.
We sincerely hope that such a history will never be repeated between our two nations."
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