of the Imperial Japanese Army, who was tried and hanged by Australia in relation to the massacre in 1951. Lt Ben Hackney of the
Australian 2/29th Battalion feigned death and managed to escape. He crawled through the countryside for six weeks with two broken legs, before he was recaptured. Hackney survived internment in Japanese POW camps, and was part of the labour force on the notorious
Burma Railway. He and two other survivors gave evidence regarding the massacre to Allied war crimes investigators. The commander of the Imperial Guards, Lt Gen.
Takuma Nishimura, was later in charge of occupation forces in eastern
Singapore. He was indirectly involved in the
Sook Ching massacre in Singapore. Nishimura retired from the Japanese army in 1942 and was made military Governor of
Sumatra. Following the war, he was tried by a British military court in relation to the Sook Ching massacre. Nishimura received a life sentence, of which he served four years. As he returned to Japan, Nishimura was removed from a ship at
Hong Kong by Australian
military police and charged in relation to the Parit Sulong massacre. Nishimura was taken to
Manus Island in the
Territory of New Guinea, where he faced an Australian military court. Although Lt. Hackney was shown Nishimura's photo, Hackney could not determine that Nishimura was the culprit. However, Nishimura's family members have often said that Nishimura's photo frequently introduced as a war criminal after Pacific War seems to be one of another person. Hiroshi Kato, a former Japanese journalist, claims that this error seems to have already occurred at the Manus Island camp. It is unclear if this photo was the same one Hackney saw, but it is possible that Hackney saw a photo that was already wrong. After all, other evidence was presented stating that Nishimura had ordered the shootings at Parit Sulong and the destruction of bodies. He was convicted and executed by hanging on 11 June 1951. In 1996, Australian journalist
Ian Ward published
Snaring the Other Tiger, which suggested that the Australian Army prosecutor, Captain
James Godwin—a former
Royal New Zealand Air Force pilot who had been ill-treated as a POW in Sumatra—had "manipulated" evidence to implicate Nishimura. Ward states that Godwin took no action on the testimony of Lieutenant Fujita Seizaburo, who reportedly took responsibility for the Parit Sulong massacre. Fujita was not charged and his fate is unknown. Extensive research conducted by Professor Gregory Hadley and James Oglethorpe and published in the
Journal of Military History in 2007 subsequently showed that the evidence that purported to indict James Godwin was a later fabrication created to further political causes in the 1990s. ==See also==