The West Australian – AFP, June 10, 2014
Tokyo (AFP) - The skeletal remains of what are believed to be Japanese soldiers have been exposed on a remote Pacific island where rising sea levels have eroded the seashore, Japanese and local officials said Monday.
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| Rising sea levels unearth WWII Japan soldiers in Pacific (AFP) |
Tokyo (AFP) - The skeletal remains of what are believed to be Japanese soldiers have been exposed on a remote Pacific island where rising sea levels have eroded the seashore, Japanese and local officials said Monday.
The bodies
of around 20 men have emerged from the earth at a small coastal cemetery
because of the action of the ocean on the Marshall Islands, a place scientists
have long warned is vulnerable to rising sea levels caused by climate change.
"The
government of the Marshall Islands has informed us that remains of about 20
human bodies have been exposed on the seashore of Enniburr island," said a
Japanese official, referring to one of the small islands that forms part of the
Pacific nation.
"The
remains, believed to be those of Japanese soldiers, surfaced after waves eroded
a cemetery built on the seashore, according to the Marshall Islands
government," he said.
Annual peak
tides in February and March have caused heavy shoreline damage in Majuro,
Kwajalein and other atolls in the Marshalls in recent years, exposing graves
and damaging houses.
In 2008, a
cemetery on the Majuro shoreline was badly damaged when it was battered by high
tides and ocean surges.
The
low-lying Marshall Islands, a Pacific atoll chain that sits barely a metre
above sea level, announced plans at the time for a wall to hold back rising
seas.
Japanese
artefacts
"The
remains appear to all be male between the ages of 18-40 and strongly appear to
be of Asian descent," Michael L. Terlep, chief archaeologist at the
Marshall Islands Historic Preservation Office, told AFP on Monday.
"This
is supported by the Japanese artefacts at the site (including a soy sauce
bottle, military buttons, and Japanese coins) as well as historical data that
suggest United States forces confronted Japanese resistance at the northern end
of Enniburr."
The
Marshall Islands, like other Pacific island nations, are increasingly being
threatened by rising sea levels, which have left previously safe parts of the
shore at risk from erosion.
"In
the tropical western Pacific where a large number of small island communities
exist, rates (of sea-level rise) up to four times the global average
(approximately 12 millimetres a year) have been reported between 1993 and
2009," according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
"It is
important to note... rising sea level will incrementally increase the rate and
extent of erosion in the future," added the report, which was issued in
March.
Japan
controlled the Marshall Islands from 1914 until the final stages of the war,
when they were taken by the United States.
The island
country, made of more than two dozen atolls, became independent in 1986, but
part of it -- Kwajalein Atoll, where Enniburr island also sits -- remains under
the control of the US military, the Japanese official said.
"Japan
will probably send a research team for the exposed human remains, but no
concrete plan has been made yet since it is under the management of the US
military," he said.
Japan has
for decades been trying to retrieve the remains of millions of Japanese
nationals -- including soldiers -- scattered throughout the Asia-Pacific,
swathes of which were controlled by the Japanese military until the later years
of World War II.

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