On August 2, 1945, something horrible occurred in Sado Island in Japan.
There was a prison camp there, known as Camp 109, where soldiers from the UK, Australia, the Netherlands and the US were held as prisoners of war. The Japanese Army made them work in the Aikawa Ore Mine.
That morning, the entire group of 387 prisoners were sent deep underground, some 400 feet down. But they didn't know that the mine had been loaded full of bombs the night before. At 9:10am, after the guards left the area, the bombs went off.
The blasts hermetically sealed in every prisoner inside. No one could get out. Afterwards, the guards attempted to cover up what had occurred. They tore up the train tracks around the mine, threw them inside and set off another explosion to seal the entrance completely.The truth was admitted later by a Japanese officer, Lieutenant Yoshiro Tsuda. He said the army had an order that all prisoners had to be killed so they couldn't be rescued by the Allies. That order was executed and not a single man of the 387 survived.

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