CRIME
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Medical
Experiments on POWs
By Sheldon H. Harris |
According
to the Hippocratic oath, it is the duty of medical personnel not only
to heal the sick and offer comfort to those beyond healing but also
to do nothing knowingly harmful to a patient. But beginning in the
1930s and continuing throughout World War II, the Japanese medical
profession as a whole, and, most particularly, medical staff attached
to the Japanese military routinely committed atrocities, subjecting
prisoners of war, noncombatants, and political and common criminals
alike to hideous medical experiments.
Although the Imperial government had pledged to treat prisoners of
war (POWs) with care and respect, prisoners were treated brutally
while medical treatment for sick prisoners was either nonexistent,
or, at best, primitive, apathetic, or indifferent. The consequences
of this policy of mistreatment are revealed by a comparison of mortality
rates in Japanese POW camps with those in Europe. The death rate in
Japanese camps was at least 27 percent. In Europe the figure was roughly
4 percent.
Graver still was the decision on the part of the Japanese medical
establishment as Japans army conquered a wide swath of territory
in the Pacific and on the mainland of Asia in 1942 to treat POWs and
conquered peoples as prime candidates for human experimentation, as
well as substitutes for the animals traditionally used for medical
training purposes. Captives, both military and civilian, were strapped
to gurneys, vivisected without anesthesia, injected with scores of
different pathogens, or used in demonstrations of surgery techniques.
In one instance in the Philippines, several prisoners were used to
teach neophyte Japanese physicians the art of surgery. A number of
healthy males were taken into a field, forced to lie down on a sheet,
had masks placed over their noses, and were anesthetized. The victims
were then cut open as the senior surgeon demonstrated proper
techniques to his students. When the lesson was over, one of the surgeons
would shoot the patients, since they were no longer useful for teaching
purposes.
In another incident in China in 1942, a senior surgeon conducted an
operation exercise for the benefit of the young doctors
and other medical personnel attached to his unit. This surgeon injected
an anesthetic into the lumbar region of a healthy patient. When one
of the observers questioned the surgeon as to whether he was going
to disinfect the needle he was using for the injection, the surgeon
replied, What are you talking about? We are going to kill him.
Captured American airmen were frequently subjected to vivisection
experiments. In July of 1944 on Dublon Island in the South Pacific,
a surgeon used American POWs for a particularly ghastly experiment.
Eight POWs were subjected to tests in which tourniquets were applied
to their arms and legs for periods up to seven and eight hours. Two
of the men died from shock when the tourniquets were removed. They
were then dissected and their body parts were tested for various maladies.
Their skulls were saved as souvenirs by the principal surgeon. In
another episode in May and June of 1945, eight American airmen were
vivisected at Kyushu Imperial University, one of Japans most
prestigious medical schools. Lungs were removed from two of the prisoners.
Other victims had their hearts, livers, and stomachs removed. Still
others, their brains and gall bladders. Of course, none of the eight
survived.
These are only a few examples from what was a systematic pattern of
medical atrocities. From 1942 until Japans surrender in mid-August
of 1945, Japanese physicians and support staff performed hundreds
of similar experiments. Many hundreds, if not thousands, of test subjects
died. But few of the perpetrators were ever brought to justice, and
many enjoyed distinguished careers in postwar democratic Japan.
No Japanese government has ever acknowledged the guilt of these physicians,
although the laws of armed conflict completely prohibit such crimes
and did so during World War II, even before the passage of the 1949
Geneva Conventions. The 1906 Hague Convention, which Japan had ratified
before hostilities broke out, provides that officers, soldiers,
and other persons officially attached to armies, who are sick or wounded,
shall be respected and cared for, without distinction of nationality,
by the belligerent in whose power they are.
At the Nuremberg Tribunals following World War II, medical experiments
were declared a crime against humanity. The Geneva Conventions of
1949 defined medical experiments on POWs and protected personsthat
is, civilians under the control of an occupying forceas a grave
breach, and the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
stated that medical experiments are war crimes, whether they occur
in an international armed conflict or an internal one. It defined
the crime as: Subjecting persons who are in the power of an
adverse party to physical mutilation or to medical or scientific experiments
of any kind which are neither justified by the medical, dental or
hospital treatment of the person concerned nor carried out in his
or her interest, and which cause death to or seriously endanger the
health of such person or persons.
(See biological experiments.)

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