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  • Hachette Australia
  • Hachette Australia

Hell on Earth: Sandakan - Australia's greatest war tragedy

Michele Cunningham

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Australia, c 1939 to c 1945 (including WW2), Biography: general, True war & combat stories, Prose: non-fiction, Australasian & Pacific history, 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000, Military history, Second World War, Irregular or guerrilla forces & warfare

The heart-rending story of the Australians brutally imprisoned in Sandakan, the Japanese POW camp in North Borneo, whose very name came to symbolise cruelty and ill-treatment.

In mid-1942, after the fall of Singapore, almost three thousand Allied prisoners of war were taken by the Japanese from Changi to Sandakan. Of those, 2500 lost their lives.

Men died at Sandakan and Kuching, and on the infamous 'death marches': they died from sickness and starvation, torture and appalling violence, or were killed by the guards as they were forced to keep moving along a seemingly never-ending track. Only six Australians survived the death marches, out of the thousand who left ...

Michele Cunningham's father was one of those who survived Sandakan, and then Kuching. Through the mateship and common bond of the survivors, she has had access to their stories, and here she gives an account of these courageous men those who refused to break no matter how badly they were treated; and those brave men who didn't make it. And it is the story of the depths to which the Japanese sank.

HELL ON EARTH is a remarkable story of bravery, brutality, mateship and survival.

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