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Sandakan

door Paul Ham

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This is the story of the three-year ordeal of the Sandakan prisoners of war - a barely known episode of unimaginable horror. After the fall of Singapore in February 1942, the Japanese conquerors transferred 2700 British and Australian prisoners to a jungle camp some eight miles inland of Sandakan, on the east coast of North Borneo. For decades after the Second World War, the Australian and British governments would refuse to divulge the truth of what happened here, for fear of traumatising the families of the victims and enraging the people.The prisoners were broken, beaten, worked to death, thrown into bamboo cages on the slightest pretext, starved and subjected to tortures so hideous that none survived the onslaught with their minds intact, and only an incredibly resilient few managed to withstand the pain without yielding to the hated Kempei-tai, the Japanese military police.But this was only the beginning of the nightmare. In late 1944, Allied aircraft were attacking the coastal towns of Sandakan and Jesselton. To escape the bombardment, the Japanese resolved to abandon the Sandakan prison camp and move 250 miles inland to Ranau, taking the prisoners with them as slave labour, carriers and draught horses. Their journey became known as the Sandakan Death Marches. Of the 2700 prisoners originally sent to Sandakan, only six - all of them Australians - would survive.This important and harrowing book narrates the full story of Sandakan, as told through the experiences of the participants. Paul Ham has interviewed the families of survivors and the deceased, in Australia, Britain and Borneo, and consulted thousands of court documents in an effort to piece together exactly what happened to the people who suffered and died in British North Borneo, and who was responsible.… (meer)
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A very detailed account of the events leading from the fall of Singapore to the brutal Sandokan death marches. The Sandokan marches were less well known to me than other Japanese / Formosan wartime atrocities, and the author thinks they hav been generally obscured. Paul Ham has attempted to set that to right, with a great piece of scholarship that covers all there is to be known about the British and Australian prisoners on Borneo, the Japanese and Formosan perpetrators, and crucially the many locals who worked heroically to undermine the Japanese, often at the cost of their own lives. Its an important story, engagingly and often heart wrenchingly told. Some of the ordeals that the prisoners went through really defy description and certainly defy comprehension.

My only criticism is that, so anxious is Ham to give each of the fallen their place in the story and the recognition they have lost, that sometimes the thread of the narrative is broken in favour of individual biographies; but Ham can be forgiven for that. He also is a little harsh on Allied command, at least somewhat aware of the fate of the captured who basically leave them to it. But as he himself argues, there was little strategic importance to Borneo and many calls on scare resources - and the prisoners themselves didnt seem to expect anything other than the long drawn out death the vast majority received

An important, harrowing book, that deserves a wide readership ( )
1 stem Opinionated | Mar 29, 2014 |
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Dedicated to the Australian and British prisoners of

war in Borneo who never came home, the few who

did, and the local people who tried to save them
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This is the story of the three-year ordeal of the Sandakan prisoners of war - a barely known episode of unimaginable horror. After the fall of Singapore in February 1942, the Japanese conquerors transferred 2700 British and Australian prisoners to a jungle camp some eight miles inland of Sandakan, on the east coast of North Borneo. For decades after the Second World War, the Australian and British governments would refuse to divulge the truth of what happened here, for fear of traumatising the families of the victims and enraging the people.The prisoners were broken, beaten, worked to death, thrown into bamboo cages on the slightest pretext, starved and subjected to tortures so hideous that none survived the onslaught with their minds intact, and only an incredibly resilient few managed to withstand the pain without yielding to the hated Kempei-tai, the Japanese military police.But this was only the beginning of the nightmare. In late 1944, Allied aircraft were attacking the coastal towns of Sandakan and Jesselton. To escape the bombardment, the Japanese resolved to abandon the Sandakan prison camp and move 250 miles inland to Ranau, taking the prisoners with them as slave labour, carriers and draught horses. Their journey became known as the Sandakan Death Marches. Of the 2700 prisoners originally sent to Sandakan, only six - all of them Australians - would survive.This important and harrowing book narrates the full story of Sandakan, as told through the experiences of the participants. Paul Ham has interviewed the families of survivors and the deceased, in Australia, Britain and Borneo, and consulted thousands of court documents in an effort to piece together exactly what happened to the people who suffered and died in British North Borneo, and who was responsible.

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