Mitsubishi apologizes for using American POWs as slaves during WWII
Japanese mega-company Mitsubishi has made an historic apology to American prisoners of war from World War II for forcing them into slave labor after their capture. According to the BBC, it’s believed to be the first such apology made by a private Japanese company.
At a ceremony at the Simon Weisenthal Center in Los Angeles, Mitsubishi executive Hikaru Kimura expressed his regret that the company had used POWs as slave labor in several mining operations it ran during WWII. James Murphy, 94, was on hand to accept the apology from the company that manufactured much of Japan’s air force, saying “for 70 years we wanted this.” Of the 500 American POWs estimated to have been enslaved, only two could be located, and only Mr. Murphy was healthy enough to attend the ceremony in person—though relatives of some of the other POWs were present.