Li Hai-ching

Li Hai-ching (Chinese: 李海青; pinyin: Lǐ Hǎiqīng; also Li Hai-Tsing; 1895 – August 1937)[1] was the leader of about 10,000 Anti-Japanese guerrilla troops in the south of Kirin, now Heilongjiang province, resisting the pacification of Manchukuo.

They called themselves Anti-Japanese Army For The Salvation Of The Country[citation needed] and were described as being equipped with light artillery and numerous machine guns.

Li established his headquarters at Fuyu and were in control of the territory there and southward as far as Nong’an.

Small Japanese detachments sent from Xinjing radioed for help, after suffering heavy casualties in the fighting.

In another action in late April, 100 km south of Harbin on the Chinese Eastern Railway, 3,000 Chinese soldiers under General Li Hai-tsing, ripped up the railway tracks and tore down telegraph wires.