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China urges boycott of Japan hotel group in massacre row

An APA hotel in central Tokyo

China's tourism authority called Tuesday for a boycott of Tokyo-based hotel group APA in an escalating row over a book by the company's CEO denying a Japanese wartime massacre took place. Copies of the book asserting that the 1937 massacre by Japanese soldiers in the Chinese city of Nanjing did not occur have been placed in hundreds of rooms operated by the APA hotel group, angering Beijing. APA has so far refused to remove copies of the book, written under a pen name by its CEO Toshio Motoya, despite Chinese criticism. "Seeing that Japan’s APA hotels is continuing with its erroneous ways, the China National Tourism Administration... demands that all businesses involved in overseas tourism and Internet travel-industry platforms stop all cooperation with these hotels," said the tourism authority's spokesman Zhang Lizhong. Zhang's comments were made in a press conference in Beijing and posted on the agency's website. China says 300,000 people died in Nanjing in a six-week orgy of killing, rape and destruction by the Japanese military, and accuses Tokyo of failing to fully atone for the episode. The revelation of the book's existence caused outrage on China's social media. Last week a Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman lambasted Motoya and complained that the book underlined the refusal of some in Japan to "squarely face history." The book, written in Japanese and English, said the Nanjing incident was fabricated. Motoya said the killing of 300,000 people was impossible because the city's population at the time was only 200,000. The Japanese military invaded China in the 1930s and the two countries fought a full-scale war from 1937 until Japan's defeat in World War II in 1945. Some respected foreign academics estimate a lower number than China contends were killed in the massacre, but there is no mainstream scholarship doubting that it took place.