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SEIZING CRIMINALS

AUSTRALIAN INSISTENCE. DR. EYATTH MISSION. (N.Z. Press. Association.—Copyright.) ' (Special Australian Correspondent.) (Rec. 9.30 a.m.j SYDNEY, Sept. 4. The Minister for External Affairs (Dr. Evatt) is to leave for England by air tomorrow to represent Australia on tho Council of Foreign Ministers. It is expected that he will raise directly with members of the British Government the question of Australia’s dissatisfaction that' no Japanese war criminals have yet been arrested. The Australian Government’s feeling on this subject was made evident by Dr. Evatt’s statement that Australia would “not let thp Japanese criminals get away with anything.” The Australian Government in the last few days has exerted strong pressure on the United States and British Governments for the arrest of Japanese war criminals, and, according to an officer of the Department of External Affairs, will continue to do so. The Government’s views have also been communicated to General MacArthur and the United Nations War Crimes ' Commission. Publication . of the accounts of Japanese atrocities and the ill-treatment inflicted on Australian and other Allied prisoners of war has aroused wide support for the Government’s attitude. Lieut.-General G. Bennett, former Commander-in-Cliief of tho A-I.F. Eighth Division, said: “The punishment cannot be too severe for those who indulged in an animal lust for cruelty and terrorism.” Mr H. R. Redding, general secretary of the Australian Natives’ Association, said: “All Australians will back the Government’s protests to the last angry syllable. Kid-glove methods are wasted on the Japanese.”. While agreeing that the guilty men of Japan must be brought to justice, the Daily Telegraph says that vengeance alone is useless. “We would do little for the future peace of the Pacific if we failed to realise that the Japanese bestiality is a form of perverted religion,” says the paper in an editorial. “All the trials in the world will not help unless we can succeed in reeducating Japanese youth along entirely opposite lines. “No matter how great the temptation, we shall not achieve this if v we think more of vengeance than of correction. We cannot kill 70,000,000 Japanese and we have to live in the same ocean with them. Wo must, therefore, try to mako them fit to live with. To do that we have to weed out every shred of influence by the military caste, who have been moulding the bodies and minds of a slave nation. “The tendency will be to punishand forget. The Japanese war lord can take the punishment and exploit the forgetfulness. Our determination must lie to eradicate the war lord and his creed, and to remember long enough to see Japan converted to a peaceful neighbour in a prosperous Pacific.”

The importance the Government attaches to a proper expression of Australia’s external policy*is such that Dr. Evatt is leaving for London forthwith. The Prime Minister (Mr C’liifley), in a statement on tho Minister’s task, said: “Dr. Evatt ■ has undertaken several very successful wartime missions abroad on behalf of the Government. His present mission will be of even greater importance because of the hearing it will have on the final peace settlement and on the security not only of Australia and the Pacific, but also of the whole world.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19450904.2.56

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume LXV, Issue 236, 4 September 1945, Page 5

Word Count
530

SEIZING CRIMINALS Manawatu Standard, Volume LXV, Issue 236, 4 September 1945, Page 5

SEIZING CRIMINALS Manawatu Standard, Volume LXV, Issue 236, 4 September 1945, Page 5