Li Guizhen, one of the victims of the incident that
happened on August 4, 2003, in which Several Chinese
citizens in northeast China were exposed to the mustard gas
that leaked from the chemical weapons left by Japanese
invaders, died on the night of August 21, after emergency
treatments failed. On August 22, Vice Foreign Minister Wang
Yi urgently summoned Koreshige Anamia, Japanese ambassador
to China, and again lodged solemn representations to the
Japanese government.
Wang said that after the
leaking of chemical weapons left by Japan in Qiqihar, the
Chinese government has held a highly responsible attitude
towards its peoples lives and tried its utmost to save
and treat the victims. Li Guizhen died from severe injuries,
which aggravated the whole issue to an extremely painful
degree. The Japanese government cannot shirk its
responsibility for the serious
consequence.
Wang said the chemical weapons
abandoned by Japan in China have taken many Chinese
peoples lives. Even today, 58 years after Japans
military invasion of China, they are still threatening many
Chinese people's lives. The Chinese people have every right
to be indignant.
He stressed that the Chinese
people's feelings and dignity should and must be
safeguarded. China absolutely cannot allow such a tragedy to
happen again, nor will it allow the situation where Japanese
chemical weapons harm the Chinese people to continue. The
Chinese side strongly demands the Japanese government
faithfully implement the prescriptions in the Convention on
the Banning of Chemical Weapons and relevant agreements
reached by the two sides, and clear up the leftover chemical
weapons with a responsible attitude. On the damages and
losses of the victims and places concerned, Wang strongly
urged Japanese government to take responsibility with
concrete actions as soon as possible, and give needed
answers to the victims and Chinese people.