, reading: "Records of
Wō slaves driving Koreans to massacre my compatriots" Negotiations continued between the Japanese and the Chinese authorities to resolve the situation. The Chinese maintained that the Koreans had no right to reside and lease land outside of
Gando District, per the terms of the
Gando Convention. The Japanese, on the other hand, insisted that Koreans, as Japanese subjects, had the same rights of residing and leasing land throughout South Manchuria as other Japanese. They also held that the Koreans had undertaken their project in good faith and blamed any irregularities on the Chinese broker who arranged the lease. The Japanese eventually withdrew their consular police from Wanpaoshan, but the Koreans remained. A complete solution of the Wanpaoshan affair had not been reached by September 1931. Propaganda efforts on alleged anti-Korean riots in China continued after the
Mukden Incident and the
Japanese invasion of Manchuria. According to the
New York Times, it was reported in September in Japan that an anti-Korean attack in
Ssupingkai resulted in the deaths of 300 Koreans. In November, a Japanese commander in Changchun claimed that in
Jilin, Chinese rioters massacred 10,000 Koreans and burnt or looted Korean houses all over the province. ==See also==