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Last Updated: Sunday, May 17, 2026 at 04:23 PM
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Bullet taken from woman’s head 64 years later

A Chinese woman’s 64-year headache has ended after doctors removed a bullet that relatives said lodged in her skull when Japanese soldiers shot her during World War II, state media reported.

A Chinese woman’s 64-year headache has ended after doctors removed a bullet that relatives said lodged in her skull when Japanese soldiers shot her during World War II, state media reported on Monday.

Jin Guangying, now 77, lost consciousness after a Japanese patrol in Jiangsu province fired on her in 1943 as she went to meet her grandfather, a guerrilla fighter, the Beijing News said.

“When she came to, her head was wrapped in a bandage and she never realized there was a bullet lodged deep in her head,” the paper said.

Later, she would regularly have headaches, foam at the mouth and “talk nonsense ... like she had gone mad,” the paper said.

Jin’s family had thought her symptoms were due to a tumor, the paper said, quoting Wang Zhengping, the woman’s daughter.

“Because our family was poor, we were never able to have her taken for a thorough checkup,” Wang said.

A military expert in Nanjing, the Jiangsu capital, had identified the bullet as one used by Japanese soldiers at that time, the newspaper said.

Jin’s relatives planned to seek redress for her more than 60 years of suffering.

“As her children, we will soon go to Nanjing to consult with relevant experts as to how to seek compensation from the Japanese government, and will definitely be seeking a public apology,” the paper quoted Wang as saying.