CRASHED....A
RAF plane similar to the one that crashed in Kuala Pilah being loaded with
supplies.
By : LYDIA KOH
KUALA LUMPUR : Finally,
after 67 years, the air crash victims of a British Royal Air Force plane will
be buried with full military honours at the Cheras Road Commonwealth War Grave
Cemetery here this morning.
On August 23, 1945, an
eight-member crew from the 356 Squadron left Cocos Islands, Australia on a
supply mission to Malaya during World War II.
Unfortunately due to poor
weather conditions, Royal Air Force Liberator KL654 crashed in the jungle in
Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan and everyone on the plane lost their lives.
“For many years my mother
never knew what happened to her brother and she tried to find out. They were
very close and they looked alike. According to her, he was very religious too.
He was a Methodist and he would go into the villages to preach,” said Diane
Fletcher, niece of Flight Lieutenant John Selwyn Watts, the pilot who died in
the crash.
TELEGRAM
....The original telegram sent to the next of kin after the Liberator aircraft
was reported missing.
Family members of the
victims were flown in from the UK to attend the reburial ceremony. Besides
Watts, the 356 Squadron crew included co-pilot Flying Officer Edward Donald
Mason, navigator Flying Officer William Kenneth Dovey, air bomber Flying
Officer John Trevor Bromfield, wireless operator/air gunner Flight Sergeant
Arthur Turner, flight engineer Flight Sergeant Jack Blakey, wireless
operator/air gunner Flight Sergeant Raymond Arthur Towell and air gunner Flight
Sergeant William Ross.
“It is a privilege and
honour to work on this. I’m grateful for those who were involved including the
Malaysian Armed Forces, Malaya Historic Group and Malaya Wrecks Research Group.
Tomorrow will be a special day where the aircraft victims will finally be laid
to rest. It is the close of the final chapter,” said Sue Raftree, historic casework
manager in the UK Ministry of Defence, at a press conference yesterday.
The Royal Malaysian Air
Force visited the site of the aircraft crash in 1991 when it was found by
locals. Subsequently, the Malaysian
Armed Forces, Malaya Historic Group and Malaya Wrecks Research Group visited
the crash site in 1996.
“I’ve always had a fascination
for history and aircraft as a child so when I read the news about the discovery
in 1996, I decided to find out more about the Royal Air Force Liberator KL654,”
said Shaharom Ahmad of the Malaya Historic Group.
Shaharom then contacted
Sager Ahmad who had been actively involved in expeditions similar to this. The
Malaya Historic Group comprises five members and they were also involved in the
recovery of the remains of the crew of Royal Air Force Dakota KN630. The team
self-funded the expeditions before the British officials approved of the
recovery.
HONEYMOON....
The newly-married Watts and his wife, taken on their honeymoon in Blackpool,
five weeks before his tragic death.
“In 2000, we managed to get
the full information of the people aboard the plane. We corresponded with the
family members and helped them to get more information to present it to the
authorities.
“During our initial find, we
managed to get the R number of the plane but back then the British officials
refused to accept this as evidence because there were several planes with the
same number at that time.
“Three years later, we found
a faded KL654 marking on the fuselage and we sent this proof of identification
to the families. In 2005, we managed to find a stronger marking of KL654 but at
that time the British authorities said that there was not enough budget to
recover the remains.
“It was only later that we
found a plate bearing a Pratt & Whitney engine serial number and some
personal belongings that the British authorities decided to accept this as a
proof of identity,” said Shaharom.
Between 2005 and 2008, the
family members of the aircraft victims used this information to encourage the
British officials to send out a team. In late 2008, Arthur Lane from the
National Ex-Services Association requested for British volunteers to help out
with the recovery of the remains.
“I decided to help out as a
tribute to my great-uncle Bob Ungless who was a PoW at that time,” said Clayton
Ford, one of the British volunteers who helped out in the expedition together
with Ed Macy.
“These men deserve a proper
burial because they did a service for the country. They died to help out my
great-uncle’s friends,” said Ford.
An expedition involving
Ford, Macy and a number of Malaysians in 2009 resulted in a post-expedition
report that stated that 63 human bones and 18 possible human bones had been
found. The UK Ministry of Defence and Malaysian authorities then engaged
forensic experts in Hospital Kuala Lumpur to identify the remains of Royal Air
Force Liberator KL654.
The Commonwealth War Graves
Commission then agreed that the remains should be interred in a single coffin
after discussions with the family members of the crew.
“The UK Ministry of Defence
doesn’t actively search for crash sites and the expedition in 2009 was
privately funded by individuals,” said Raftree. The ministry needed evidence,
such as the engine serial number. Otherwise, the site would remain a war grave.
“It has been 67 years since
the crash and 3½ years since their remains were discovered, and now the
servicemen, who had tragically lost their lives for their country, can finally
be laid to rest. I am glad that their family members will be able to pay their
last respects and that they will be accorded the military honours that they
deserve,” said Simon Featherstone, British High Commissioner to Malaysia.
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