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Okinawa Battle Victims Remembered on 80th Anniv. of U.S. Landing

Okinawa Battle Victims Remembered on 80th Anniv. of U.S. Landing

Residents observe a moment of silence in a ceremony marking the 80th anniversary of the U.S. forces' first landing on the Kerama Islands during World War II, in Zamami, Okinawa Prefecture, on Wednesday.
Residents observe a moment of silence in a ceremony marking the 80th anniversary of the U.S. forces' first landing on the Kerama Islands during World War II, in Zamami, Okinawa Prefecture, on Wednesday.

   Zamami, Okinawa Pref., March 26 (Jiji Press)--A memorial ceremony was held in an Okinawa Prefecture village Wednesday, the 80th anniversary of the U.S. military's landing on the Kerama Islands, which preceded fierce ground battles in the southwestern Japan prefecture during World War II.
   Bereaved families and others prayed for peace and the victims of the ground battles during the ceremony, hosted by the village of Zamami in the Kerama island chain about 40 kilometers west of the main island of Okinawa.
   Over 200,000 people, including civilians, were killed in the ground battles on Okinawa islands. The U.S. military's landing on the morning of March 26, 1945, led to a mass suicide using grenades and other means, which left an estimated 290 Zamami residents dead.
   The total number of military and civilian causalities in Zamami reached about 1,200, including those who died in air raids and naval gunfire.
   "We learned the horror of war and the preciousness of peace through the last world war," Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki said during the event. "It's our duty to correctly convey to the next generation the absurdity of war and the preciousness of peace." He is the first Okinawa governor who attended the annual memorial in Zamami.

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AFP-JIJI PRESS NEWS JOURNAL


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