Hashima Island, known as 'Battleship Island' and locally called 'Hell Island,' was Japan's most brutal death camp where thousands of forced laborers died in underwater coal mines from cave-ins, explosions, starvation, and beatings, with bodies dumped into the sea to hide evidence; today Japan celebrates it as a UNESCO World Heritage Site while refusing to acknowledge the systematic murder that occurred there.
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The Island Japan forgot About?Ajouté :
This concrete fortress rising from the ocean was actually Japan's most brutal death camp. Hashima Island trapped thousands of forced laborers in underwater coal mines where screams echoed through flooded tunnels. Workers died from cave-ins, explosions, and starvation while guards beat anyone who collapsed. The island earned the nickname Battleship Island, but locals called it Hell Island. Bodies were dumped into the sea to hide the evidence. Today, Japan celebrates it as a UNESCO World Heritage Site while refusing to acknowledge the systematic murder that happened here. The concrete walls still echo with the voices of the dead.
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