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Death March Km 00


Death March Km 00
Photo Information
Copyright: ranz ramos (ranz) Silver Note Writer [C: 3 W: 0 N: 26] (131)
Genre: Places
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2007-02-08
Categories: Decisive Moment
Camera: Nikon D-50
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2007-03-10 4:36
Viewed: 519
Points: 2
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
In March 1942, Homma began his plans for the American and Filipino troops who would become Prisoners of War. He planned on moving them to Camp O'Donnell, about one hundred miles away. According to the Japanese military, this was not a long distance, and their troops could easily accomplish it within a few days. However, those on Bataan were not in good physical health. Since January they had been on half-rations or less. During the surrender agreement, King told Homma that he had more men than the Japanese planned for and that they were ill and undernourished. But Homma ignored these facts, plus King's offer to drive the troops to the prison camps. According to the Japanese, once the POWs were in their captivity, they could do with them as they wished, and King's requests were disgraceful.

The Bataan Death March began at Mariveles on April 10, 1942. Any troops who fell behind were executed. Japanese troops beat soldiers randomly, and denied the POWs food and water for many days. One of their tortures was known as the sun treatment. The Philippines in April is very hot. Therefore, the POWs were forced to sit in the sun without any shade, helmets, or water. Anyone who dared ask for water was executed. On the rare occasion they were given any food, it was only a handful of contaminated rice. When the prisoners were allowed to sleep for a few hours at night, they were packed into enclosures so tight that they could barely move. Those who lived collapsed on the dead bodies of their comrades. For only a brief part of the march would POWs be packed into railroad cars and allowed to ride. Those who did not die in the suffocating boxcars were forced to march about seven more miles until they reached their camp. It took the POWs over a week to reach their destination. Those on Corregidor would suffer the same fate as their fellow soldiers on Bataan did as they too were transferred to Bataan.


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Critiques [Translate]

  • Great 
  • pehpot (0)
  • [2007-04-19 12:24]

nice photo. your composition gives an eerie feeling to me. i think even without your note one could tell how horrible the death march is just by looking at your photo..

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