-
Real Madrid will 'keep fighting' in title race, vows Arbeloa
-
Australia join South Korea in quarters of Women's Asian Cup
-
Kane to miss Bayern game against Gladbach with calf knock
-
Henman says Raducanu needs more physicality to rise up rankings
-
France recall fit-again Jalibert to face Scotland
-
Harry Styles fans head in one direction: to star's home village
-
Syrian jailed over stabbing at Berlin Holocaust memorial
-
Second Iranian ship heading to Sri Lanka after submarine attack
-
Middle East war spirals as Iran hits Kurds in Iraq
-
Norris hungrier than ever to defend Formula One world title
-
Fatherhood, sleep, T20 World Cup final: Henry's whirlwind journey
-
Conservative Nigerian city sees women drive rickshaw taxis
-
T20 World Cup hero Allen says New Zealand confidence high for final
-
The silent struggle of an anti-war woman in Russia
-
Iran hits Kurdish groups in Iraq as conflict widens
-
China sets lowest growth target in decades as consumption lags
-
Afghans rally against Pakistan and civilian casualties
-
South Korea beat Philippines 3-0 to reach women's quarter-finals
-
Mercedes' Russell not fazed by being tipped as pre-season favourite
-
Australia beat Taiwan in World Baseball Classic opener
-
Underdogs Wales could hurt Irish after Scotland display: Popham
-
Gilgeous-Alexander rules over Knicks again in Thunder win
-
Hamilton reveals sequel in the works to blockbuster 'F1: The Movie'
-
Alonso, Stroll fear 'permanent nerve damage' from vibrating Aston Martin
-
China boosts military spending with eyes on US, Taiwan
-
Seoul leads rebound across Asian stocks, oil extends gains
-
Tourism on hold as Middle East war casts uncertainty
-
Bayern and Kane gambling with house money as Gladbach come to town
-
Turkey invests in foreign legion to deliver LA Olympics gold
-
Galthie's France blessed with unprecedented talent: Saint-Andre
-
Voice coach to the stars says Aussie actors nail tricky accents
-
Rahm rejection of DP World Tour deal 'a shame' - McIlroy
-
Israel keeps up Lebanon strikes as ground forces advance
-
China prioritises energy and diplomacy over Iran support
-
Canada PM Carney says can't rule out military participation in Iran war
-
Verstappen says new Red Bull car gave him 'goosebumps'
-
Swiss to vote on creating giant 'climate fund'
-
Google to open German centre for 'AI development'
-
Winter Paralympics to start with icy blast as Ukraine lead ceremony boycott
-
Sci-fi without AI: Oscar nominated 'Arco' director prefers human touch
-
Ex-guerrillas battle low support in Colombia election
-
'She's coming back': Djokovic predicts Serena return
-
Hamilton vows 'no holding back' in his 20th Formula One season
-
Two-thirds of Cuba, including Havana, hit by blackout
-
US sinks Iranian warship off Sri Lanka as war spreads
-
After oil, US moves to secure access to Venezuelan minerals
-
Arteta hits back at Brighton criticism after Arsenal boost title bid
-
Carrick says 'defeat hurts' after first loss as Man Utd boss
-
Ecuador expels Cuba envoy, rest of mission
-
Arsenal stretch lead at top of Premier League as Man City falter
China's rulers push party role before WWII anniversary
An elderly Chinese war veteran's shin still bears the mark of a bullet wound he suffered when fighting the Japanese as a teenager, a year before the end of World War II.
Eighty years on, Li Jinshui's scar remains as testimony to the bravery of Chinese troops in a conflict that killed millions of their people.
But the story behind China's overthrow of the brutal Japanese occupation is deeply contested.
Historians broadly agree that credit for victory lies primarily with the Nationalist army, the dominant Chinese force at the time.
However, its leader, Chiang Kai-shek, fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong's communists, laying the groundwork for decades of cross-strait tensions that continue to this day.
Beijing argues that the Communist Party (CCP) played a central role in the war, bolstered by the stories of Li and his comrades' courage and sacrifice.
It is a narrative expected to prevail at a major military parade on September 3.
"With the country in trouble, Chinese people with conscience had to stand up," said Li, who turned 98 on Wednesday and was a soldier in the CCP-run Eighth Route Army.
After Japan's full-scale invasion in 1937, the CCP resisted mainly by guerrilla fighting in the rural, hilly stretches of northern China outside of Nationalist control.
Li was shot in the leg while fighting the Japanese in his native Wuxiang County in China's rugged northern province of Shanxi.
Released from the hospital early, he returned to the battlefield despite not having fully recovered.
Dressed in a green military uniform topped by a cap with a red star, Li bent to pull up his left trouser leg, revealing the scar he has carried for decades.
"It was extremely hard for us," he said.
"We were just young lads."
- Making grenades -
At a government-organised media tour in July, veterans including Li touted the CCP's role in liberating China from the yoke of Japanese imperialism.
"The Kuomintang didn't play a major role in the war against Japanese aggression," said Wen Yunfu, 96, referring to Chiang's Nationalist Party by its Chinese name.
"It was mainly the Communist Party."
Wen's hometown of Shenzhou in northern Hebei was attacked by the Japanese army just a few months after their 1937 invasion.
Chiang's army was forced to retreat south in the face of the Japanese onslaught.
That left the people under the leadership of the Communist Party, Wen said.
"Life was extremely difficult for the people," he said.
"Our home was burned down. My uncle was also killed by the Japanese."
Wen later joined Mao's CCP at 16 in the final months of the war, and was put to work making grenades.
A truce was called in the civil war between the Kuomintang, which ruled most of the country at the time, and the insurgent Communist Party in the years leading up to the defeat of Japan in 1945.
That suspension came to an end in the wake of Japan's defeat, and the CCP was ultimately victorious in the ensuing domestic conflict.
- 'Correct' history -
Under Xi Jinping -- China's most powerful leader since Mao -- special attention has been paid to pushing the "correct" interpretation of the complex history of the victory over Japan, said Rana Mitter, author of multiple books on China's role in World War II.
"They're trying to find ways in which the Communist role can be brought more to the forefront," Mitter told AFP.
Mitter doesn't contest that the party's role was significant.
However, he said, "the primary role in terms of political and military resistance against the Japanese was played by the then-government of China, which was the Nationalist Kuomintang government".
There have been efforts in recent decades to recognise the contributions made by forces other than the Communists, including the Kuomintang and the United States.
One chapter that has received widespread attention is the "Flying Tigers" US air brigade that fought with the Kuomintang in the early 1940s, conducting dangerous assaults on enemy bombers.
A museum in Zhijiang, Hunan, sheds light on their assistance just a stone's throw away from a key airport from which they launched their missions.
Still, there are glimmers of the complicated history at play.
AFP could see the scars of three Chinese characters since removed from the monument.
The erased name is likely Wang Tung-yuan, according to Ji Jianliang, a local Communist Party historian.
Wang, a general under Chiang and later Taiwan's ambassador to South Korea, had once provided an inscribed dedication for the monument.
Ji said his name had been removed for "complex political reasons".
B.Baumann--VB