When the children and babies sucked gasoline and were crying, feeling great pains, the Yankees threw flaming torches to kill them.
A survey group of the International Association of Lawyers published a joint communique in 1952 bitterly denouncing the U.S. imperialists’ massacre in Sinchon as an unprecedented-in-scope murder.
"[8] In July 2015, Kim Jong-un visited again with senior military official Hwang Pyong-so, revealing a major expansion of the Sinchon massacre museum.
[9] In a report prepared in Pyongyang, the non-governmental and historically Communist-affiliated[10][11][12] International Association of Democratic Lawyers lists several alleged incidents of mass murder by U.S. soldiers in Sinchon.
[13] In addition, they claimed that American troops had beheaded up to 300 North Koreans using Japanese samurai swords, and that the US Air Force was using bacteriological warfare in Korea.
[16][17][18] According to Dong-Choon Kim, a former commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Sinchon massacre was carried out by "right-wing security police and a youth group.
[17][19] South Korean novelist Hwang Sok-yong claims that the massacre was caused by a local rivalry that used the fog of war as a pretense.
[20] In 1989, Chicago Tribune, the journalist Uli Schmitzer wrote: If any truth about massacres in Chichon (Sinchon) ever existed, the evidence has long ago been obscured.
The town, 70 miles [110 km] south of the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, has been turned into a national shrine by a ruthless propaganda machine that has fueled anti-American passions for 36 years in support of an institutionalized, regimented communist regime.