Along with the naval commander at Rabaul, Vice Admiral
Jinichi Kusaka, Imamura surrendered the Japanese forces in New Guinea and the southern Pacific Islands to Australian forces, representing the Allies, in September 1945. Imamura was detained at Rabaul by the
Australian Army, as he and troops under his command were accused of
war crimes, including the execution of Allied
prisoners of war. One infamous example, called the "pig-basket atrocity", occurred when prisoners captured in eastern Java were transported in bamboo baskets used for pigs. In April 1946, Imamura wrote to the Australian commander at Rabaul, requesting that his own trial for war crimes be expedited in order to speed the prosecution of war criminals under his command. Imamura was charged with "unlawfully [disregarding and failing] to discharge his duty... to control the members of his command, whereby they committed brutal atrocities and other high crimes." He was tried by an Australian military court at Rabaul on 1–16 May 1947; he was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for ten years. Imamura served his imprisonment at
Sugamo Prison in
Tokyo until he was released in 1954. He considered his imprisonment too light with respect to his responsibility for the crimes of his subordinates, so he had a replica of the prison built in his garden, and he stayed there until his death in 1968. == Notes ==