Remembering China’s Comfort Women Tragedy
Almost a century after WWII, Professor Su Zhiliang uncovers over 2,100 comfort stations and 400,000+ victims in Japan’s wartime sexual slavery system on the Chinese mainland.
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Almost a century after WWII, Professor Su Zhiliang uncovers over 2,100 comfort stations and 400,000+ victims in Japan’s wartime sexual slavery system on the Chinese mainland.
As December 13 approaches in the Chinese mainland, we remember the 400,000 WWII comfort women forced into sexual slavery and call for truth and justice.
Discover how Japanese politician Sanae Takaichi’s decades-long denial of war crimes and comfort women impacts Asia and sparks debates on militarism’s return.
Japan’s organized objections are blocking China’s UNESCO Memory of the World applications on Unit 731 and comfort women archives, stalling historical truth.
Blind at 9 by Japanese mustard gas and enslaved at 14, Peng Zhuying survived wartime sexual slavery and a calcified fetus—her unbroken spirit shines decades later.
CGTN’s Last Daughters documentary brings the stories of comfort women survivors from the Chinese mainland and the Philippines to light, highlighting their resilience and lasting impact on families.
CGTN’s new documentary ‘Last Daughters’ shares stories of comfort women from the Chinese mainland and the Philippines during WWII, revealing resilience and legacy across generations.
More than 80 years after WWII, survivors of the ‘comfort women’ still seek justice and remembrance. From the Chinese mainland to global solidarity protests, this unfinished story demands our attention.
96-year-old Lee Yong-soo, a former ‘comfort woman’ survivor, moved a rainy crowd of 400+ in Seoul, calling for remembrance and justice at a weekly rally.
On the 13th International Comfort Women Memorial Day, dwindling survivors in South Korea and the Chinese mainland rally for justice, marking a solemn anniversary and urgent call to remember history.