JAPANESE PRISONERS OF WAR AT PENWEGON (30/7/1945)

This film is held by the Imperial War Museum (ID: JFU 285).

Synopsis

Prisoners, captured during a recent breakout operation by the Japanese 28th Army, are seen arriving at 17th Indian Division's headquarters at Penwegon, Burma, along with a group of Chinese 'comfort girls' freed from the Japanese.

A British corporal (a military policeman?) drives a jeep carrying five Chinese 'comfort girls'. They arrive at 17th Division HQ and get out. Japanese prisoners of war (POWs) arriving. Each POW is searched. POWs bathing in oil drums; they wash themselves. The 'comfort girls' are interrogated. Slow pans across the group of girls. They sign their names. POWs entering a wood and wire POW cage. Pan across a group of twenty POWs sitting on the ground in the cage. POWs eating; they squat on the ground and eat from boxes and tins. POWs file off to waiting trucks. The POWs, with armed escorts, board the trucks. The Chinese girls board a truck. The trucks drive away; presumably departing for a more secure location.

Notes

By this point in the war in Burma the Japanese Army's supporting services had collapsed, leaving many soldiers without reliable food supplies or medical services. With large numbers of troops being forced into the hills in the face of the Allied advance in 1945, the physical condition of many Japanese soldiers deteriorated rapidly. During July 1945 the Japanese Army attempted to break through Allied lines and escape into Thailand; 11,500 were killed and some 660 captured.

The 'comfort girls' were forcibly recruited throughout the Japanese occupied territories to work in Army brothels.

Additional coverage by Sergeant Abbott. For this, and footage of the battle in which these men were captured, see related items.

 

Titles

  • JAPANESE PRISONERS OF WAR AT PENWEGON (30/7/1945) (Allocated)
Series Title:
BRITISH ARMY OPERATIONS IN SOUTH EAST ASIA DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
 

Technical Data

Year:
1945
Running Time:
5 minutes
Film Gauge (Format):
35mm
Colour:
B&W
Sound:
Silent
Footage:
383 ft
 

Production Credits

Production Countries:
GB
Sponsor
War Office Directorate of Public Relations
cameraman.
Hewit, J R (Sergeant)
Production company
SEAC Film Unit
 

Countries

 

Production Organisations