WWW.DIVYASANDESH.IN
Chinese archaeologists have discovered an underground facility near Anda, China, believed to have been used by Unit 731 of the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II.
Unit 731 conducted brutal experiments on humans between 1935 and 1945, exposing prisoners to pathogens and dissecting them to study the effects on the human body.
The findings from these experiments were used by Japan's Imperial Army to spread diseases like typhoid, cholera, and plague across China.
The underground bunker consists of several interconnected tunnels and chambers, including a U-shaped cluster of bunkers and a circular room believed to have been used for observing and dissecting infected human subjects.
The facility was built below the ground to maintain secrecy, with barracks, bathhouses, and dining areas among the structures.
Most of the surface-level buildings at the Anda site were destroyed in 1945, but the underground structures remained intact.
The discovery of the bunker could provide new evidence about the war crimes committed by Unit 731.
The research highlights the ongoing legacy of Unit 731's atrocities and their impact on global efforts to prevent biological warfare.