
Originally published bySouth China Morning Post
As one of the biggest targets of wartime looting in centuries past, China is now positioning itself as a global pioneer in repatriating lost cultural artefacts. This article, the first in a two-part series, Xinlu Liang looks at whether a stolen 1,300-year-old Chinese stone now housed in Japan’s Imperial Palace can become a test case for a reckoning over wartime plunder.
In 1945, following Japan’s surrender to the Allies, supreme commander General Douglas MacArthur ordered the country to return...
🇨🇳
More news from ChinaChina
ASIA
Related News

Potato Corner drops Baby Poco Blind Boxes — collect & win 365 Days of FREE Fries
Just now

Hong Kong police seize 1,600 litres of diesel, arrest 1 in raid of illegal fuel site
11h ago

Khairy says won't seek position if returning to Umno
11h ago

Russia declares emergency in Dagestan's capital as floods cut power to more than 327,000 people
9h ago

UAAP: NU eyes recovery as it braces for surging Adamson
10h ago