A prisoner’s list serves the cause of British Gurkha veterans

January 1, 2006
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British Gurkha soldiers in the World War II (Photo courtesy: BBC News)

British Gurkha soldiers in the World War II (Photo courtesy: BBC News)
A list of 1,000 British Gurkhas– who were imprisoned by the Japanese in the World War II—compiled by a late British Army Captain has proved a boon to the Gurkha veterans who had made claims for compensation, a news report said.

According to an online story carried by the BBC News, in November 2003 the British government decided to pay £10,000 to each of its soldiers who were interned in Japanese prisoner-of-war camps during World War II.

Among those who were eligible were Nepali Gurkhas who fought for Britain. But the team sent to Kathmandu to discover which Gurkhas were eligible faced an almost insuperable task of identifying who had served in the war.

Many looked as if they would never benefit from the payout, since few had the papers necessary to prove that they had been captured, said the news story.

And there the story might have ended, had an article outlining the problem not appeared in the UK’s Daily Telegraph newspaper.

The sad tale of the Gurkhas was read almost by accident by Veronica O’Neal, the widow of Captain Peter O’Neal, who had served with the Gurkhas.

Mrs O?Neal (Photo source: BBC News)

Mrs O’Neal (Photo source: BBC News)
“I don’t usually read newspapers,” Mrs O’Neal told BBC, “so it was quite extraordinary that I saw the article at all. But having seen it, I realised that I had a list of Gurkhas that my husband had kept, up in a suitcase in my loft. And I felt I had to contact someone and let them know.”

In Mrs O’Neal’s loft were sheets of thin paper, typed in Rangoon at the end of World War II. They contained the names of 1,000 Gurkhas who had been imprisoned by the Japanese.

Captain O’Neal was captured along with his men following the fall of Malaya (the former name for peninsular Malaysia) in 1942. He was interned in a series of prisoner of war camps, and made to work on the notorious Burma railway.

It is not known exactly how many Gurkhas were imprisoned by the Japanese, but Britain’s Ministry of Defence estimates that they numbered around 3,000.

As adjutant of the Second Battalion, First Gurkha Rifles, Captain O’Neal felt it incumbent on him to keep a list of all the men under his command. So he recorded all his troops in a Royal Navy logbook. This had to be hidden, as any records were forbidden by the Japanese.

Finally, as the war drew to a close he was forced to hand it over to his captors, but not before he had made a copy, which he buried in a jar covered with tin, under his camp hut. When the war was finally over it was dug up, returned to Captain O’Neal and transcribed.

List of POWs compiled by British Army captain Peter O?Neal (Source: BBC News)

List of POWs compiled by British Army captain Peter O’Neal (Source: BBC News)
It is this list that has now helped the British army to so far identify more than 790 Gurkha soldiers and their widows. Each will receive the promised sum of $17,000 (nearly Rs 1.19 million)- a fortune for most Nepalis, the news report said.

“I have had a letter from Nepal saying some of the Gurkhas are so happy they don’t know what to say. Others openly weep with gratitude. And some would like to write to me, but don’t have the skills. But that’s enough thanks for me,” BBC quoted Mrs O’Neal as saying.

The Far East Prisoner of War team of the British Army attempting to identify those eligible for the payments will finish its work in February 2006.

Gurkhas have fought for Britain for almost 200 years, and are considered an integral part of the British Army.

During World War I, 100,000 Gurkhas joined up, fighting in France, Belgium, Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, Gallipoli and Palestine. They served again during World War II and since then have fought in Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone and Iraq.

There are currently 3,400 Gurkhas in the British Army. Their record of bravery is unrivalled, and Gurkha battalions suffered 43,000 casualties and won 26 Victoria Crosses in two World Wars, the online news report said.