A、Japan had revised related laws to grant pension to the family of these convicted war criminals. B、Some people at home and abro

admin2010-04-28  36

问题  
The notorious Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo on Saturday made fallacious claim that the 14 World War Ⅱ Class-A war criminals it enshrines are no longer war criminals in Japan.
   According to a written statement of the shrine in response to the interview of Tokyo News, the Yasukuni Shrine doubted the just sentence on the war criminals by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East after the WWII, saying the IMTFE sentence is not unconditional correct.
   "Japan has revised related laws to grant pension to families of those convicted war criminals as well as the ordinary war dead, both are called the dead of official duty," the shrine claimed. "In this term, the war criminals are no longer regarded as criminals in Japan because the government never grants pensions to criminals."
   Yasukuni also rejected the call at home and abroad to establish new national memorial to separate enshrinement of the Class-A war criminals from the ordinary war dead in the shrine, urging Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to continue his Yasukuni visits.
   Many Asian countries have strongly protested Japanese leaders’ visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, which honors the Class-A war criminals responsible for Japan’ s aggression war against its Asian neighbors.
   Koizumi has paid annual visits to the shrine since he took office in 2001.

选项 A、Japan had revised related laws to grant pension to the family of these convicted war criminals.
B、Some people at home and abroad called Yasukuni to establish new memorial to separate war criminals from ordinary war dead
C、Koizumi took office in 2001.
D、Yasukuni hadn’t make response to the call of separating war criminals from ordinary dead

答案D

解析
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