Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - September 18 Japanese brutal colonial rule in northeast China.

September 18 Japanese brutal colonial rule in northeast China.

It is said that Japan's atrocities in Northeast China in those years can best reflect colonial rule and it is a pioneer group.

From 65438 to 0936, Japan formulated the so-called "Manchuria Agricultural Migration Plan", and a large number of Japanese agricultural poor and a large number of Korean poor flooded into the three northeastern provinces. Since the victory of the Anti-Japanese War in 45 years, Japan has organized 14 pioneering immigrant groups, of which more than 200,000 are pure Japanese, which can be regarded as Koreans directly incorporated into Japan, and the number of pioneering groups is close to 500,000. It must be pointed out that the Japanese Pioneering Group was not a mere immigrant, but a paramilitary organization that invaded China in a more comprehensive way. After the pioneers came to the rural areas in Northeast China, the land as the main means of production was forcibly bought from farmers in China at an ultra-low price, most of which was only a symbolic one yuan per acre. After plundering a large amount of cultivated land, the Japanese in the pioneering group did not cultivate it, but rented it to China farmers who lost their land to collect rent. The members of the pioneering group mainly participated in military training. A large number of pioneering groups migrated to the Northeast to plunder land, which led to the loss of land for more than five million farmers in China. The people of China who lost their land were either displaced from place to place, or were hungry and cold in the "group tribe" established by Japan, and countless people froze to death. It's impossible to count now.

Another cruel Japanese colonial rule in northeast China was the exclusive system of rationing all means of subsistence.

In Manchukuo at that time, it was illegal for China people to even eat rice. Other daily necessities, such as cloth and salt, can only be bought in Japanese-controlled shops. Take the cloth price in the early days of Manchukuo as an example. At that time, the highest price of cloth in Shanhaiguan Pass was only 1.2 1 ft, while the price of cloth in Manchukuo was as high as 28 cents, so ordinary people could only buy cloth brands produced by Japanese dye factories.