Lest we forget: 100 join commemoration run

KOTA KINABALU: About 100 avid runners took part in the Lest We Forget Run 2018, held simultaneously all over Australia yesterday to capture the ANZAC spirit. The 4km run started at Padang Merdeka here and ended at Kota Kinabalu City Hall compound were flagged off by deputy High Commissioner of Australia to Malaysia Michael Growder and City Hall Mayor Datuk Yeo Boon Hai. The run which covers Jalan Padang, Jalan Tunku Abdul Rahman, Jalan Nenas and Jalan Istana was to remind the public about the Second World War atrocities of the Japanese armies who forced over 2,400 British and Australian prisoners of war (POW) to march for a torturous 160 miles from Sandakan to Ranau. The run was also to remember the allied heroes during the liberation of Sabah and to raise the public awareness that our freedom was assured by the supreme sacrifice of our fallen heroes. In Malaysia, the inaugural run was held on May 2, 2014 at Sandakan which themed ‘Remembrance of Our Fallen Heroes’. The run was to promote the War Memorial Park in Sandakan at Taman Rimba which is the actual site of the Japanese POW camp. The run also cement the bond shared between Sabah and Australia ever since the Japanese occupation 1942-45. –By Paul Mu Source: New Sabah Times
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Anzac enhances ties between Australians and M’sians: CM

Sandakan: Over 70 years ago, Malaysians and Australians fought side by side during the Second World War. That cooperation eventually forged the bonds of friendship between Malaysia and Australia. Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman said the bond was further strengthened when Australians again came to the aid of a new Malaysian nation, striving together for peace during the Malayan Emergency and Indonesian Confrontation. "We share a history. We share a freedom hard fought and valiantly won. We mourn together, men and women of our nations who sacrificed their lives to achieve it, and we renew our commitment to ensure that their sacrifice was not in vain. "It is the privilege of the Sabah people to protect this memorial park, a grave witness to one of the great tragedies of war, and to help those who visit to understand what happened here. "For this is not only a place of memorial and history, but of education and commemoration," he said at the Anzac Day Ceremony at the Sandakan Memorial Park, near here, Monday. His speech was delivered by Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Assistant Minister Datuk Pang Nyuk Ming. Musa said within the memorial park were stories which spoke of the realities of war and of those who provided shelter for soldiers. "(These were stories) of placing one foot in front of the other, day in, day out in the fight for survival, for freedom and for peace." In 1942, a significant number of Australian soldiers captured by the Japanese offensive in Southeast Asia was sent to the prisoner-of-war camp in Sandakan to construct a military airstrip the Japanese believed would assist the war effort. After the allies bombed the completed airfield in 1945, the Japanese commander chose to relocate the surviving prisoners, 260km to Ranau in three separate marches through dense forests and mountainous terrain. Source : Daily Express
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