The Sorry Treatment of our War Heroes
By Anthony Correa
First published in the Bulletin of the Lusitano Club (Hong Kong).

Collection J Bosco Correa

He was interned at the infamous Sham Shui Po Prisoner of War (“POW)” Camp, where he and his fellow Volunteers were subjected to the same cruel, inhumane treatment as enlisted Allied soldiers from Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other parts of the Commonwealth. In breach of the Geneva Convention, these men were forced into manual labour such as breaking rocks at Kai Tak with hand tools, given starvation rations that were unfit for animals, and the water that was unclean. They were tortured and beaten by their notoriously cruel guards on a daily basis. Many died in POW camps during their three and half years of captivity. The POWs emerged from these camps malnourished, sick and broken men.
However, after the war this “equal treatment” by the Japanese was not returned by the British Army or the Hong Kong colonial government. The British enlisted soldiers that were POWs were provided pensions and healthcare at British Military hospitals to care for them and bring them back to health with the best available care. The Canadian and other Commonwealth governments likewise took back their enlisted soldiers and provided them with every care and support they could in their home countries.
The Volunteers were not afforded this privilege. In fact they were cast aside by the British Colonial authorities to fend for themselves without a pension. Most importantly no healthcare was provided to these men at British Military of Hong Kong Government hospitals to care for the illnesses and trauma caused by their time in the POW camps. My uncle Mem suffered from kidney failure, and he and his family had repeatedly approached the Hong Kong government and the British Army for dialysis treatment at their hospitals to treat his condition. He was not provided any healthcare assistance and died from kidney complications in 1977. Many other Portuguese, Eurasian, Chinese and Indian POWs suffered the same fate (SCMP article ‘Awaiting the Last Post’, 29 August, 1982).

