City of Belmont - Ruth Faulkner Public Library

The witness, the fighting had ended but for Sandakan's most notorious prisoner the war was not over, Tom Gilling

Label
The witness, the fighting had ended but for Sandakan's most notorious prisoner the war was not over, Tom Gilling
Language
eng
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
platesillustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The witness
Responsibility statement
Tom Gilling
Sub title
the fighting had ended but for Sandakan's most notorious prisoner the war was not over
Summary
He did what he needed to survive . . . the story of Sandakan's most notorious POW. At the Australian war crimes trials that followed World War II, one prosecution witness stood out: he was Sergeant-Major Bill Sticpewich. During Sticpewich's three years inside the infamous Sandakan POW camp, hundreds of Australians had died of starvation, sickness and overwork. Others were shot or bayoneted by Japanese guards on brutal forced marches. Of more than 2400 Allied prisoners at Sandakan, only six came home. It was Sticpewich's meticulous evidence that sent Sandakan's sadistic commandant and his henchmen to the gallows. But to his fellow prisoners Bill Sticpewich was not a war hero but a collaborator who avoided heavy labour and obtained extra food by ingratiating himself with the Japanese. Was Sticpewich a traitor or an opportunist or both? Drawing on wartime records, interviews and the recollections of survivors, The Witness unravels the story of Sandakan's most notorious prisoner
Target audience
adult
Classification