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Stolen Years: Australian prisoners of war - The Selarang Barracks Incident

  • Introduction
  • First World War
  • Second World War
  • Korean War
  • Prisoners of the Germans
  • Prisoners of the Italians
  • Prisoners of the Japanese

 

On 30 August 1942 the Japanese demanded that the prisoners at Changi sign a document promising not to escape. To British and Australian prisoners, who saw it as their duty to escape if they could, this was unacceptable.

To force the prisoners to comply, 15,900 British and Australian prisoners in Changi were ordered into the barrack blocks and parade ground of Selarang Barracks. Before the war the barracks had held just 800 men. Only three taps were working, and latrine pits, kitchens and hospital beds were crowded into an area of about a square kilometre.

For four days the prisoners remained firm. Dysentery broke out and sick men began to die. Realising that more would die needlessly, the prisoners’ commanders decided that they would agree to sign, under duress. This became known as the Selarang Barracks Incident.

Collection Item C21942

Accession Number: 106530

The scene in Selarang Barracks: fifteen thousand prisoners, including hundreds of men with dysentery, crowd into the barrack square. The damage on the photo resulted from its being concealed in the false bottom of a water bottle until the war’s end.
106530

Collection Item C41142

Accession Number: P00603.025

An officer signing the “no escape” paper after the resolution of the Selarang Barracks Incident.
 

Prisoners of the Japanese

  • Surrender
  • Changi
  • The Burma-Thailand Ralway
  • Survival
  • Ambon & Hainan
  • Sandakan
  • Outram Road
  • Nurses
  • Civilian internees
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Stories

  • Selarang Barracks incident
  • Occupying the mind in changi
  • The changi quilts
  • Food
  • Murray Griffin works of art

Last updated: 15 November 2019

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