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Sandakan
Death Marches
The Sandakan POW camp was destroyed a few months after the end of WW2, by the retreating Japanese troops. In No. 1 compound, graves containing the bodies of 300 Australian and British prisoners were later discovered. It is believed they were the men left at the camp after the second series of marches. Each grave contained several bodies, in some cases as many as 10.
The Sandakan Death Marches were a series of forced marches
from
Sandakan
to
Ranau
which resulted in the deaths of more than 3,600
Indonesian
civilian
slave labourers
and 2,400
Allied
prisoners
of war
held captive by the
Empire of Japan
during the
Pacific campaign
of
World War II
at
prison camps
in
North Borneo
. By the end of the war only 6 Australians survived of all the prisoners who had been incarcerated at Sandakan and Ranau.
Constructing the airstrip
In 1942 and 1943, Indonesian civilians imported from
Java
, along with
Australian
and
British
POWs who had been captured at the
Battle of Singapore
in February 1942, were shipped to North Borneo in order to construct a military airstrip and
POW camp
at
Sandakan
, North Borneo (
Sabah
). As on the
Burma Railway,
the prisoners were
forced to work
at gunpoint, and were often beaten whilst receiving very little food or medical attention. In August 1943, with the intention of controlling the enlisted men by removing any commanders, most officer prisoners were moved from Sandakan to the
Batu Lintang camp
at
Kuching
. Conditions for the remaining prisoners deteriorated sharply following the officers’ removal. Any rations given were further reduced, and sick prisoners were also forced to work on the
airstrip
. After construction was completed the prisoners initially remained at the camp. In January 1945, with only 1,900 prisoners still alive, the advancing Allies managed to successfully
bomb
and destroy the airfield. It was at this time with Allied landings anticipated shortly that camp commandant Captain Hoshijima Susumu decided to move the remaining prisoners westward into the mountains to the town of
Ranau,
a distance of approximately 260 kilometres (160 miles). He claimed that this was an order of Lt Gen Masao Baba, commanding officer of the 37th Japanese Army.
The first marches
The first phase of marches across wide
marshland
, dense
jungle
, and then up the eastern slope of
Mount Kinabalu
occurred between January and March 1945. The Japanese had selected 470 prisoners who were thought to be fit enough to carry baggage and supplies for the accompanying Japanese battalions relocating to the western coast. In several groups the POWs, all of whom were either malnourished or suffering serious illness, started the journey originally under the intention of reaching Jesselton (
Kota Kinabalu
). Although the route took nine days, they were given enough rations for only four days. As on the
Bataan Death March
, any POWs who were not fit enough or collapsed from exhaustion were either killed or left to die en route. Upon reaching Ranau, the survivors were halted and ordered to construct a temporary camp. As one historian later commented: "Those who survived… were herded into insanitary and crowded huts and many died from dysentery. By 26 June, only five Australians and one British soldier were still alive."
The second marches
A second series of marches began on 29 May 1945 with approximately 536 prisoners. The new Sandakan camp commander,
Captain
Takakuwa Takuo, ordered the prisoners towards Ranau in groups of about fifty with accompanying Japanese guards. The march lasted for twenty-six days, with prisoners even less fit than those in the first marches had been, provided with fewer
rations
and often forced to forage for food. Compound No. 1 of the Sandakan camp was destroyed in an attempt to erase any evidence of its existence. Only 183 prisoners managed to reach Ranau. Upon their arrival on 24 June 1945, participants of the second marches discovered that only six prisoners from the first series of marches during January were still alive.
The final march
Approximately 250 people were left at Sandakan after the second march departed. Most prisoners were so ill that the Japanese initially intended to let them
starve to death
. However on 9 June 1945 it was decided to send another group of 75 men on a final march. The remaining men were so weak that none survived beyond 50 kilometres (30 miles). As each POWcollapsed from exhaustion, he was shot by a Japanese guard. All remaining prisoners left at Sandakan who could not walk either were killed or died from a combination of starvation and sickness before, and/or in the following 3 weeks after the Japanese surrender on 15 August 1945.
Aftermath
Due to a combination of a lack of food and brutal treatment at the hands of the Japanese, there were only 38 prisoners left alive at Ranau by the end of July. All were too unwell and weak to do any work, and it was ordered that any remaining survivors should be shot. They were killed by the guards during August, possibly up to 12 days after the end of the war on August 14.
As previously mentioned, only six
Australian servicemen
managed to escape. During the marches, Gunner Owen Campbell and Bombardier Richard Braithwaite managed to escape into the jungle, where they were assisted by locals and eventually rescued by Allied units. During July 1945, Private Nelson Short, Warrant Officer William Sticpewich, Private Keith Botterill and Lance Bombardier William Moxham managed to escape and were helped by local people, who fed them and hid them from the Japanese until the end of the war. Of the six survivors, only three survived the lingering effects of their ordeal in order to give evidence at various war crimes trials in both
Tokyo
and
Rabaul
. The world was able to receive eyewitness accounts of the crimes and atrocities committed. Captain Hoshijima was found guilty of war crimes and hanged on April 6 1946. Capt Takakuwa and his second-in-charge, Capt Watanabe Genzo, were found guilty of causing the murders and massacres of prisoners-of-war, and were hanged and shot on 6 April 1946 and 16 March 1946 respectively.
A War Memorial and Gardens of remembrance were built at
Kundasang
, Sabah in 1962, and a Memorial Park has been created on the site of the Sandakan POW camp to commemorate those who had their lives unlawfully and unmercifully taken from them. Thse events have been described as the worst atrocity ever committed by the Japanese Empire during World War Two.
The Sandakan Death Marches have been dramatised in the 2004 play Sandakan Threnody — a
threnody
being a hymn of mourning, composed as a memorial to a dead person. The play was written by Australian composer Jonathan Mills, whose father survived a term of imprisonment at Sandakan in 1942-43.
Australians must never forget the tragic circumstances of these events, ever !
LEST WE FORGET
No 1 Compound - Sandakan -
Contained the bodies of 300 Australian & Brithish servicemen, with up to 10 bodies in each grave.
Private Allan Quailey
Allan Quailey
Allan Quailey, an Australian soldier, became a prisoner of war when Singapore fell to the Japanese on 15 February 1942.
In July that year, he was among 1500 Australians transferred from Singapore to Sandakan. POW Camp. Tough and resilient, he survived the forced labour at the camp and was among the 455 fitter prisoners placed on a draft to march from Sandakan to Ranau, in January 1945. (see The Death Marches)
On 15 February 1945, having negotiated all but 20 kms of the 250 km trek to Ranau, his party stopped for the night outside Nalapak. After existing on starvation rations, the POWs had managed to trade a blanket for some worm-ridden pork before they left Paginatan, 23 kms away, that morning. On arrival at Nalapak, they eagerly prepared a stew to which they added wild tapioca, sweet potato, fern tops and a large melon, found along the way. However, when the men lifted the first spoonful to their lips, they immediately began to retch. What the melon was, they did not know, but it had imparted a taste so vile and bitter, that no one, not even the most ravenously hungry, could swallow as much as a mouthful. After many days of near-starvation, it was all too much for Allan Quailey, who wept with frustration and disappointment.
As they continued along the track the following morning, it was obvious that something was the matter with Quailey. A friend, who stayed behind to help him, realised it was not just the beriberi, the malaria, or the uphill trek that was the problem. He seemed to have lost the will to go on. At the top of the ridge, he slumped against a tree, refusing all entreaties to go any further. Fully realising that he was signing his own death warrant, his friend urged him to make one final effort. It made no difference. Quailey’s fate was sealed. In accordance with their orders to dispose of anyone who could not keep up, the Japanese bringing up the rear killed him.
Post-war the bodies of those who had died along the track were recovered and reburied in Labuan War Cemetery. Quailey, who was unidentified, remained ’Know unto God’ until 1999, when Lynette Silver located and identified a grave in Labuan as that of Private Quailey. The old headstone was removed and replaced with a new one, bearing his details and an inscription, chosen by his family. (see also Grave Identifications)
Quailey's grave
The creation of Quailey’s Hill In late 1944 a track was cut to link Sandakan to Ranau, by connecting two existing foot tracks. One extended from Sandakan to the lower reaches of the Labuk River. The other went from Ranau to the river at Tampias, 50 kms away, where local people continued their journey eastwards, by boat. In 2005, when trekking expert Tham Yau Kong and Lynette Silver plotted and located the original route taken by the prisoners of war, they discovered that part of the old track passed through the area now occupied by the Sabah Tea Gardens.
Photo courtesy Rod Bramich. Quailey Hill – Where Australian POW’s were forced by Japanese guards to embark on the atrocious death march from Sandakan to Ranau during WWII
Photo courtesy Rod Bramich. Quailey Hill – Where Australian POW’s were forced by Japanese guards to embark on the atrocious death march from Sandakan to Ranau during WWII
They are not dead; not even broken; Only their dust has gone back home in the earth; For they, the essential they, shall have rebirth Whenever a word of them is spoken. - Dame Mary Gilmore
LEST WE FORGET
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