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  2. Kempeitai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kempeitai

    The Kempeitai (Japanese: 憲兵隊, Hepburn: Kenpeitai, or Gendarmerie), law soldiers, was the military police of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). The organization also shared civilian secret police that specialized clandestine and covert operation, counterinsurgency, counterintelligence, HUMINT, interrogate suspects who may be allied soldiers, spies or resistance movement, maintain security ...

  3. Double Tenth incident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Tenth_incident

    Twenty-one Kenpeitai were accused of torturing 57 internees, resulting in the deaths of 15. [4] On 15 April 1946, after a hearing lasting 21 days, Sumida was one of eight sentenced to death by hanging. Three others received life imprisonment, one a sentence of fifteen years, and two were given prison terms of eight years. Seven were acquitted.

  4. Takashi Nagase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takashi_Nagase

    Nagase was born in 1918 in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan and learned English at an American Methodist college in Tokyo. [2] He joined the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II, and became an interpreter for the Kempeitai at the construction of the Burma Railway, known for its brutal conditions leading to the deaths of over 12,000 Allied prisoners of war and 90,000 Asian labourers or romusha.

  5. Japanese occupation of Malaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_occupation_of_Malaya

    The civilian police force was subservient to them. The Commander of the 2nd Field Kempeitai unit was Lieutenant Colonel Oishi Masayuki. [24] No 3 Kempeitai was commanded by Major-General Masanori Kojima. [25] By the end of the war there were 758 Kempeitai stationed in Malaya, with more in the Thai occupied Malay states. [26]

  6. Kalagon massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalagon_massacre

    Seigi and three officers who supervised the massacre were sentenced to death. The court said Seigi would be hanged, while the other three men would be shot by firing squads. [ 2 ] As for the other three soldiers deemed complicit in the massacre, the court found that they had not directly participated in the massacre.

  7. Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_occupation_of_the...

    Four million people died in the Dutch East Indies as a result of famine and forced labour during the Japanese occupation, including 30,000 European civilian internee deaths. [3] In 1944–1945, Allied troops largely bypassed the Dutch East Indies and did not fight their way into the most populous parts such as Java and Sumatra. As such, most of ...

  8. Kenpeitai East District Branch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenpeitai_East_District_Branch

    The Kempeitai East District Branch was the headquarters of the Kempeitai, the Japanese military police, during the Japanese occupation of Singapore from 1942 to 1945. It was located at the old YMCA building, at the present site of Singapore's YMCA Building on Stamford Road .

  9. French Permanent Military Tribunal in Saigon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Permanent_Military...

    Nine of the defendants were sentenced to death, four were sentenced to death in absentia, 27 received various sentences from 7 years in prison to life imprisonment and nine were acquitted. The Phnom Penh Kempeitai (27 defendants) and Hanoi Kempeitai (37 defendants) were tried on 19 November 1946 and 5 April 1948 respectively. [20] [13]