"The Japanese soldiers told us they were going to take our picture and 
gathered us in a group. But under the black cloth they didn't have cameras, they 
had machine guns. The soldiers even bayoneted bodies to ensure the villagers 
were dead," said Yang Yufen, a 83-year-old survivor, who was just 
nine-years-old. 
"I survived because my parents shielded me with their bodies. Eighteen 
members of my family were massacred," said Yang Yufen. 
It's estimated that 20 to 30 villagers survived the massacre. 
The Japanese soldiers burned and buried all the bodies the day after they 
shot them. They also burned down 800 houses in the village, wiping it off the 
face of the earth. 
Yang Baoshan, the elderly plaintiff, was just 11 years old when he lost his 
parents in the massacre. He was shot twice and still remembers that there were 
six machine guns firing at the villagers. 
Since then he has never been able to sleep on the on the Mid Autumn Festival. 
10-YEAR-LONG LAWSUIT 
Before the lawsuit Japan would not even acknowledge the massacre had 
occurred. 
The Tokyo District Court heard the lawsuit the first time in March 1997. Mo 
Desheng was 75 when he traveled to Japan to appear in court and accuse the 
Japanese of their crime. 
In its ruling in June 2002 the Tokyo District Court finally acknowledged that 
there was a massacre. Yet it rejected the need for an apology and the 
compensation claims. 
The case next went to the Tokyo High Court on appeal. 
Mo Desheng died 10 days after the Tokyo High Court ruling in May 2005 upheld 
the lower court's ruling. 
Only six survivors of the tragedy are still alive. The youngest is 73 years 
old, while the most elderly is 92. 
The lawsuit can now only continue in Japanese courts if other plaintiffs come 
forward, lawyers said. The survivors and their lawyers are discussing what 
action they might take next. 
The lawsuit has at least raised awareness of the terrible truth with the 
Japanese public, said Ooe Kyoko, a Japanese lawyer for the plaintiffs. There are 
thousands of web pages on the Pingdingshan Massacre in Japan. JAPAN SHOULD 
APOLOGIZE: EXPERT 
As a signatory to international laws, the Japanese government should own up 
to its responsibilities, said Fu Bo, head of Fushun Academy of Social Sciences 
and leader of the Supporting Association for the Pingdingshan Massacre 
Survivors. 
Fu said, the Japanese courts are using the Compensation Law as an excuse to 
avoid providing atonement to the survivors of the massacre. 
Japanese courts have made similar rulings in dismissing similar lawsuits 
against the brutal acts committed by Japanese soldiers in Asian countries. 
"We do not sue for money. I'll give up the compensation claim but the 
Japanese government must apologize or else the dead will not rest in peace," 
said Yang Baoshan.