Clad in black and accompanied by Empress Michiko, he and Michiko each laid a bouquet of white chrysanthemums, Japan's imperial symbol, and silently prayed near a marble cenotaph in the Japanese memorial garden along Lake Caliraya in Laguna province southeast of the Philippine capital. Some of the 170 relatives of Japanese soldiers wept quietly.
Akihito did not speak at the ceremony, but in his only public remarks related to Japan's wartime aggression, he said at a banquet hosted by President Benigno Aquino III on Wednesday that Japan should never forget the massive loss of lives in the war more than 70 years ago.
"I just feel very, very proud of the fact that I was able to present my father and his existence and what he did for his country to the emperor," said Joyce Tsunoda, holding a picture of a Japanese soldier who died in the Philippines. "I think it was something that I never dreamed that I will be able to do."
On Wednesday, Akihito and his wife led a wreath-laying ceremony at Manila's Heroes Cemetery, where more than 44,000 Filipino soldiers from World War II are buried. More than 1 million Filipinos are estimated to have died in the war.
Akihito's visit to the Philippines this week is the latest in a series of foreign trips that are seen as an attempt to show his commitment to peace and remorse for World War II, when Japanese forces invaded Asian nations in a brutal conflict Japan fought in the name of his father, Hirohito.
The visit comes as the Philippines and Japan both confront an assertive China in contested territories in the East and South China Sea.
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