Japanese manga artist Mizuki dies at 93

He had enjoyed widespread popularity for decades since the release of his ‘GeGeGe no Kitaro’ comics

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AFP
AFP
AFP

Award-winning Japanese cartoonist Shigeru Mizuki, known for his comics of ghosts and monsters inspired by folklore and for his accounts of Second World War horrors, died on Monday at 93, his office said.

Mizuki, whose real name was Shigeru Mura, was hospitalised in early November after he collapsed in Tokyo, the office said on its website.

He underwent surgery but died on Monday morning of multiple organ failure in hospital, it said.

The native of Tottori prefecture in western Japan began his career as a cartoonist after surviving the Second World War during which the conscripted Japanese soldier lost his left arm in a US air strike.

Mizuki had enjoyed widespread popularity for decades since the release of his GeGeGe no Kitaro comics — called manga in Japan — depicting battles between the hero monster Kitaro and rival spirits and ghosts.

His works also covered the horror of war based on his battlefield experiences in New Britain island, now part of Papua New Guinea, and the harsh treatment common soldiers received from their superior officers.

“You were never allowed to retreat [from] the front, you had to stay until you died,” he said in an interview earlier this year.

Rank and file soldiers were treated “not as human beings, but were thought to be something less than horses”.

A museum dedicated to Mizuki opened in Sakaiminato city in Tottori in 2003 and residents named the city’s shopping district “Mizuki Shigeru Road”.

The area displays more than 100 statues of his cartoon characters and has attracted tourists and fans from across the country.

Mizuki received the Heritage Essential Award of the Angouleme International Comics Festival in France in 2009.

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