Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | News Flashes | Scoop Features | Scoop Video | Strange & Bizarre | Search

 


Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure

16 February 2012

Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure

Being in their nineties didn’t stop Bill Mitchell, of Oamaru, and Ted West, from the North Shore, attending a special ceremony to mark the 70th anniversary of the fall of Singapore in Singapore this week.

The two men, who served with the RNZAF in Singapore during the Second World War, were honoured to be able to attend the ceremony and to pay tribute to those who did not return to New Zealand.

The wreath laying ceremony at Kranji War Cemetery was also attended by the Chief of Air Force Air Vice-Marshal Peter Stockwell, and the New Zealand Defence Attache in Singapore, Group Captain Tim Walshe.

Bill Mitchell served as a fitter with the Short Singapore Flying Boat Unit in Singapore in 1942, overhauling the flying boats which had been given to New Zealand by the Royal Air Force.

He remembers running out of aircraft because the Japanese were bombing them on the ground.

“The Japanese first started bombing Seletar, where we were based - that shook them out of their beds. Then the Japanese went for Singapore, all the city lights were still on because they could not locate the individual to turn them off and so they bombed an illuminated city,” he said.

The RNZAF played a significant role in Singapore, with 488 Squadron taking an integral part in the defence of Singapore. Kiwi airmen also served in other RAF squadrons. 488 Squadron was literally thrown in the deep end, with little experience and unserviceable aircraft given to them by the RAF. Many of the deficiencies were overcome using Kiwi ingenuity with tools and parts scrounged or stolen.

During the conflict 35 New Zealand airmen lost their lives, along with 40 naval officers who died in operations either in Malayan waters or in Hong Kong, which had fallen to the Japanese on Christmas Day 1941. About 100 New Zealand servicemen and several hundred civilians became prisoners of war in the Pacific. Most POWs were in camps in Singapore, where they endured harsh treatment, and many suffered from malnutrition and disease. Those who were fortunate not to be killed or captured were eventually safely evacuated to Australia.

The fall of Singapore was the greatest military defeat for the British in 150 years. Over 80,000 British, Indian and Australian troops became prisoners of war, joining 50,000 taken by the Japanese in the Malayan Campaign. Four days later the first of the bombing raids on Darwin occurred, bringing the war very close to New Zealand.

April 2012 marks 75 years of service to New Zealand for the Air Force as an independent armed service. By the actions of its men and women throughout the Second World War, and in many conflicts and operations since, our Air Force has created a rich history, in which all New Zealanders can take pride.

While the Air Force becomes a modern 21st century Air Force with the introduction of new aircraft fleets, 75 years provides the milestone for New Zealand to celebrate the RNZAF’s proud heritage and culture and showcase the work our Air Force has done and the role our airmen and women play in this country and the region.

ENDS

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

 

Selpius Bobii: Genocide continuing against Ethnic Papuans: For whom and for what was the UN created?

West Papua is continuously burning. It has become the arena for the playing out of a conflict between a number of parties. The consequence of the fundamental political rights of the nation of West Papua having been pawned unilaterally by the Netherlands, ... More>>

Franklin Lamb: What happened to the Palestinian refugees at Masnaa this Eid al Fitr weekend?

On 8/5/13 this observer decided, quite on the spur of the moment, to take a three day break from Damascus the next morning and make a quick trip to Beirut to do some errands because offices would be closed starting at dawn for Eid al Fitr celebrations ... More>>

Sherwood Ross: U.S., Russia, China, All Torture Prisoners

The three most powerful nations all operate prison systems that are places of sadism, sickness, and madness unfit for human habitation, much less human reformation. More>>

Franklin Lamb: Seven of Syria’s Palestinian Camps Controlled By Salafi-Jihadists

Jihadists are entering Syria at an accelerating pace, according to Syrian, UNWRA, and Palestinian officials as well as residents in the refugee camps here. For the now-estimated 7000 imported foreign fighters, Palestinian camps are seen as optimal ... More>>

David Swanson: Her Name Is Jody Williams

Jody Williams' new book is called My Name Is Jody Williams: A Vermont Girl's Winding Path to the Nobel Peace Prize, and it's a remarkable story by a remarkable person. It's also a very well-told autobiography, including in the early childhood chapters ... More>>

Bathurst Decision: Denniston's "Caviar" Of Coal And Westport's Story

A little known aspect to the controversy around mining coal on the Denniston is the remarkable story of the coal itself. This has been mined continuously for the past 130 years due to its special properties - properties which also mean that it commands the highest prices in the world for "metallurgical" coking coal. More>>

ALSO:

Walter Brasch: Royal Dutch Shell: They Really Have A Friend In Pennsylvania

Royal Dutch Shell, which owns or leases about 900,000 acres in the Marcellus Shale, had a great idea. It wanted to frack the Ukraine. But, there was opposition. So, Royal Dutch Shell decided to create a junket for some of the Ukrainians opposed to ... More>>

Get More From Scoop

 
 
TEDxAuckland
 
 
 
 
 
Monitor
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news