Nie Rongzhen told the death penalty to be fished

Mondo Entertainment Updated on 2024-02-11

Tell the death penalty to dry the fish.

In December 1949, when the commander of the North China Military Region was thinking about important issues in his office, the ** on his desk suddenly sounded. **The voice on the other end said anxiously, a Japanese doctor from the Peace Hospital was ** and was being rescued.

**Surprised by this, but calmly asked** if he was caught. The person who hit ** replied that it was Sha Fei, the director of the newspaper. ** Shocked to hear the news, and fell into extreme shock after confirming it repeatedly.

Sha Fei is a native of Guangdong, who loved photography in his youth and is known throughout the country for his photographs and postings of Lu Xun's posthumous photographs. In the early days of the Anti-Japanese War, he went to the anti-Japanese front line as a reporter to cover the front, and later joined the 115th Division of the Eighth Route Army and became a propaganda officer.

On the Jin-Cha-Ji front, Sha Fei recorded many precious historical moments with his camera and presented many major events. His works not only depict the tragic scenes of the heroic resistance of the soldiers of the Eighth Route Army, but also show the spectacular scenes of the military and civilians in North China uniting to resist Japan.

In the difficult years of the Anti-Japanese War, Sha Fei regarded the camera in his hand as the leader of the Anti-Japanese War, and made outstanding contributions to the Anti-Japanese War in the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei region through photographic propaganda.

It is worth mentioning that while Sha Fei recorded history, he also witnessed the brutality of the Japanese invaders, which deeply devastated his psychology and filled him with hatred for the Japanese.

Sha Fei once said to his comrades-in-arms that the Japanese should all be wiped out, because they are all **. At that time, his comrades-in-arms thought that Sha Fei was talking angry words and did not take them to heart, but a few years later, this seemingly simple angry words led to a tragedy.

Over time, Sha Fei gradually grew into a divisional cadre and was appointed director of the newspaper. In May 1948, Sha Fei was diagnosed with tuberculosis, and his condition was very serious, and he was admitted to Shijiazhuang Bethune Hospital for **.

This hospital was the best hospital in Shijiazhuang at that time, it was founded by Bethune himself, and in 1945, when the hospital was moved to Zhangjiakou, it absorbed many Japanese medical personnel who were retained.

Although Sha Fei was distrustful of the Japanese who were retained, he even thought that some of them might be unfavorable to him. As a result, he was wary of the Japanese medical staff at the hospital in the early days of his hospitalization and hid a pistol.

However, because of the long-term tension of his nerves, he became manic, which led to tragedy. On this cold day of December 15, 1949, he calmly asked the guards to call his attending doctor, Tsu Zekatsu, to his hospital room.

After inquiring about his condition and prescribing medicine as usual, Tsusawa turned to leave, but Sha Fei suddenly pulled out his pistol and fired without hesitation, causing Tsusawa to fall to the ground. The guards tried to stop him, but Sha Fei had lost his mind and turned his gun on him.

Eventually, the guards had no choice but to run out of the ward.

Sha Fei lost control of his emotions and shot Jin Zesheng, after which he laughed loudly and threw away the pistol. The hospital security department quickly arrived, took him under control and reported it to the military district security department.

The security department of the military region attaches great importance to this matter and reports to the commander. ** Puzzled by Sha Fei's mental state, because he and Sha Fei had a deep friendship during the Anti-Japanese War and knew him well.

However, the security department reported that Sha Fei had a clear mind and did not show mental problems, and the hospital examination did not find anything abnormal. Two days later, Tsusawa died of his injuries.

Soon after, the Judge Advocate General's Office announced that Sha Fei had been sentenced to death for homicide and immediately executed. Although *** was very painful in his heart, he still signed the death penalty order in accordance with military discipline.

He begged the security to get Sha Fei some fish to eat before the execution. On March 24, 1950, a gunshot ended the life of a 38-year-old.

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