- Contributed by听
- helengena
- People in story:听
- Arthur V. Marment
- Location of story:听
- Burma
- Background to story:听
- Army
- Article ID:听
- A9035831
- Contributed on:听
- 01 February 2006
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Arthur Marment
This contribution was submitted by Major Arthur V. Marment to the People's War team in Wales and is added to the site with his permission.
When the end of the Burma war came鈥t came very suddenly鈥 personally didn鈥檛 hear. We were up to our thighs in water on the Arakan down on the Satang river and of course there were no communications from Rangoon. There was a railway track from Rangoon that was meant to go to Mandalay. But what had happened in the campaign was that one of the divisional commanders blew the bridge over the Satang river leaving a division the wrong side of the bridge. We had taken a place which really was the gateway into China and had gone back to Yen and Yong to finish the clearing and then made my way down to the Satang鈥 knew our Gurkha battalion was holding one end of the bridge and was beginning to get into difficulties because it was being shelled from the other side all the time and we had sent down four field guns from our artillery battalion and they鈥檇 kept up some defence work. The only way down to the bridge was to get on the railway and make your way down. This was highly dangerous because you could be ambushed either side of this narrow guage railway. Our engineers had got some wheels and put them on a jeep鈥nd we had one jeep you could go down on the rails. But you had to pretty careful鈥nd we were going to have to attack the Jap position our side of the bridge before we could start to cross in any number, or get away for that matter.
We put in an attack down the railway and it was a very rough show indeed and my best friend one of the company commanders, we attacked and didn鈥檛 do badly. That night though when everyone went to sleep ..we were all living off the ground on bamboo bashers, houses, and he was in there and that night the Jap sprayed his basher with machine gun bullets and one hit him in the head and alas that finished him. I tried to get him back to the hospital, but I knew he had no hope at all. He was the last British officer to be killed in the Burma war.
The purpose of the attack was to be able to spike the gun, because two of our guns had been captured. The 4th 8th Ghurkhas did well and that tidied up that. Then of course we heard about the Armistice - my intelligence officer heard on the radio the war was at an end. And when I heard about it everybody was warned very quickly and I sent my bugler out to the front area near the bridge to blow a ceasefire and of course the troops new any movement at all and you shot - you didn鈥檛 wait for anything. Then there was great rejoicing. It was a great relief.
In the meantime a prisoner of war cage had been built in our area 鈥efore we were there and we were told to send a company up the road to Mandalay where they were crossing the road the whole time鈥hey were going from east to west as fast as they could go. We were told to take the Sikh company up to take the prisoners and bring them back to this cage鈥hich we did. And of course I got food ready for them and when I gave them the food and the hot water- they were in a dreadful state - the first thing they did was they washed and fed, and they thought the food we gave them was enough to last a month and it was only for a day. Their relief was tremendous. They settled well into the cage. The next day there was to be an attack on the Pagoda ..the church鈥nd the Jap major was brought up to my company commander and was told to go to them and tell them the war was over鈥ecause we knew they wouldn鈥檛 believe it. Only a week before they had come right through our position and village鈥ust walked through! Well the Jap Major was pushed out in front of the company 鈥nd bless my soul if the Japanese didn鈥檛 fire on them. And when he managed to get nearer them and to tell them the war was over he gave the Commander there a good slapping on the spot! Soon after that my company brought the whole lot down to the cage and we stuffed them all in there.
One of the other things I did鈥 said to my quartermaster..鈥渢he war is over we鈥檒l have a great party as fast as we can. I know there are some very good prawns in the Satang river鈥o across the river and get some鈥t鈥檚 free now鈥. He did that 鈥ut while he was collecting them the other side of the bridge they really hadn鈥檛 been told the war was over and he just got back to us with the prawns in time!
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