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UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

(230723) -- ENTEBBE, July 23, 2023 (Xinhua) -- Ugandan Prime Minister Robinah Nabbanja (C, front) greets the group leader Maj. Gen. Ali Acaye while receiving the homecoming former fighters of Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group and their families at the Entebbe military airbase, Uganda, July 22, 2023. Uganda on Saturday received 14 former fighters of the notorious LRA rebel group repatriated from the Central African Republic. The first batch of former rebels led by Maj. Gen. Ali Acaye, alias "Doctor", together with 14 of their wives and 33 children who have been holed up in the jungles of CAR, arrived at Entebbe International Airport, 40 kilometers south of Kampala, the capital city, by a chartered flight. (Photo by Samuel Okiror/Xinhua)

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UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

(230723) -- ENTEBBE, July 23, 2023 (Xinhua) -- Former fighters of Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group and their families disembark from a chartered plane at the Entebbe military airbase, Uganda, July 22, 2023. Uganda on Saturday received 14 former fighters of the notorious LRA rebel group repatriated from the Central African Republic. The first batch of former rebels led by Maj. Gen. Ali Acaye, alias "Doctor", together with 14 of their wives and 33 children who have been holed up in the jungles of CAR, arrived at Entebbe International Airport, 40 kilometers south of Kampala, the capital city, by a chartered flight. (Photo by Samuel Okiror/Xinhua)

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UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

UGANDA-ENTEBBE-FORMER LRA FIGHERS-COMING HOME

(230723) -- ENTEBBE, July 23, 2023 (Xinhua) -- A local band plays Ugandan traditional music to welcome the homecoming former fighters of Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group and their families at the Entebbe military airbase, Uganda, July 22, 2023. Uganda on Saturday received 14 former fighters of the notorious LRA rebel group repatriated from the Central African Republic. The first batch of former rebels led by Maj. Gen. Ali Acaye, alias "Doctor", together with 14 of their wives and 33 children who have been holed up in the jungles of CAR, arrived at Entebbe International Airport, 40 kilometers south of Kampala, the capital city, by a chartered flight. (Photo by Samuel Okiror/Xinhua)

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Museum honoring ex-wartime straggler Shoichi Yokoi opens

Museum honoring ex-wartime straggler Shoichi Yokoi opens

NAGOYA, Japan - Mihoko Yokoi, widow of Shoichi Yokoi, a former Japanese soldier who spent over 26 years in the jungles of Guam without knowing World War II had ended, stands inside a recreated cave in a museum in Nagoya's Nakagawa Ward on June 24. Shoichi Yokoi, who returned to Japan in 1972, spent most of his time in such a cave.

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Shoichi YOKOI

Shoichi YOKOI

Shown in the photo was Shoichi YOKOI, a former Japanese soldier who made a dramatic return to Japan on Jan. 24, 1972, after living in the jungles of Guam for more than 26 years without knowing World War II had ended. He died of a heart attack at a Nagoya hospital on Sept. 22, 1997. He was 82. He said upon arrival at Tokyo's Haneda airport that he felt ''ashamed to come home'' alive, 31 years after he left Japan for fighting in the war.

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Yokoi Shoichi died

Yokoi Shoichi died

Shoichi YOKOI, a former Japanese soldier who made a dramatic return to Japan on Jan. 24, 1972, after living in the jungles of Guam for more than 26 years without knowing World War II had ended. He died of a heart attack at a Nagoya hospital on Sept. 22. He was 82.

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Shoichi YOKOI

Shoichi YOKOI

Shown in the photo was Shoichi YOKOI, a former Japanese soldier who made a dramatic return to Japan on Jan. 24, 1972, after living in the jungles of Guam for more than 26 years without knowing World War II had ended. He died of a heart attack at a Nagoya hospital on Sept. 22, 1997. He was 82. He said upon arrival at Tokyo's Haneda airport that he felt ''ashamed to come home'' alive, 31 years after he left Japan for fighting in the war. (Photo was taken in January, 1972 when he was rescured in Guam.)

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ROOTS OF HEAVEN

ROOTS OF HEAVEN

ROOTS OF HEAVEN ERROL FLYNN, TREVOR HOWARD Date: 1958

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Exhibition on Japan's WWII 'no surrender' soldier

Exhibition on Japan's WWII 'no surrender' soldier

A photograph of Shoichi Yokoi, a sergeant who held out in a remote part of the jungles of Guam for nearly three decades without knowing that World War II had ended, and the clothes he wore then are on display at Nagoya City Museum on Oct. 16, 2015. A total of 92 utensils he used during his 28 years of hiding will be exhibited until Nov. 29. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Museum honoring ex-wartime straggler Shoichi Yokoi opens

Museum honoring ex-wartime straggler Shoichi Yokoi opens

NAGOYA, Japan - Mihoko Yokoi, widow of Shoichi Yokoi, a former Japanese soldier who spent over 26 years in the jungles of Guam without knowing World War II had ended, stands inside a recreated cave in a museum in Nagoya's Nakagawa Ward on June 24. Shoichi Yokoi, who returned to Japan in 1972, spent most of his time in such a cave. (Kyodo)

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