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Breaking-News >> TodayHistory On January 18, 1932, Yoshiko Kawashima created the "Japanese monk incident"
On this day, 93 years ago, on January 18, 1932 (December 11, 1931 of the lunar calendar), Yoshiko Kawashima caused the "Japanese monk incident." After Japanese invaders invaded the three eastern provinces of China at the end of 1931, in early 1932, Yoshiko Kawashima continued to create trouble and create trouble in Shanghai in order to further invade China. On January 18, the Japanese Legation sent Takiyoshi Tanaka, the assistant officer of the military attache in Shanghai, to collude with Japanese female spy Yoshiko Kawashima to create the so-called "Japanese monk incident." Five Japanese monks Keisei Amanzaki, Hideo Mizuki and their followers deliberately threw stones at the volunteers, workers of Sanyou Industrial Co., Ltd., to provoke and abuse, resulting in "mutual beatings." Afterwards, the Japanese side claimed that a monk had been injured and died in a Japanese hospital, so it ordered dozens of thugs to go to Sanyou Industrial Co., Ltd. to set fire. They undermined and incited Japanese overseas Chinese to gather, march, destroy shops, and killed and injured three China police officers. On the 20th, the Japanese Consul General in Shanghai sent a letter of protest to the Shanghai City government, making four unreasonable demands: apology, punishment of the culprits, compensation and banning the anti-Japanese movement. Although the Shanghai City government replied to the consulate stating that it fully accepted the "four conditions," the Japanese army still attacked the China army on three routes in Zhabei at 12:00 on the night of the 28th, launching the "January 28 Incident." News raw data sources → https://www.abtool.cn/today_detail/1xdq.html 17WorldNews[2025.09.15-06:36] 访问:69
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