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Japan’s Yasukuni Shrine that honours war dead, convicted war criminals, vandalised again

  • Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine, seen as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism, reported a second case of graffiti in three months

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A blue sheet covers a stone pillar on which graffiti was found at Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo on Monday. Photo: AP

Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine, which honours Japan’s war dead, including convicted World War II war criminals, was vandalised again overnight on Monday.

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“It is deplorable that an act seeking to denigrate the shrine’s dignity has happened again,” the shrine said in a statement.

In May, a stone pillar at Yasukuni was spray-painted red.

Jiang Zhuojun, 29, who lived north of Tokyo, was later arrested “on suspicion of vandalism and disrespect for a place of worship”, Tokyo police said in July.

A Yasukuni shrine official confirmed the new case of graffiti, without elaborating further.

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Footage from public broadcaster NHK showed a stone pillar defaced with Chinese words meaning: “Dog toilet sh**. Militarism, go to hell.”

Asian nations that suffered from Japanese aggression before and during World War II see Yasukuni as a symbol of militarism.

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