The Sun (Malaysia)

‘All races defended the country’

> Former CID chief urges recognitio­n of Malay and non-Malay officers involved in war

- BY P. CHANDRA SAGARAN

IPOH: A former senior police officer who served during the communist insurgency said his team of Malay and non-Malay personnel fought together in defending the country.

Datuk R. Thambipill­ay (pix), 88, who retired as Ipoh Criminal Investigat­ion Department (CID) chief in October 1984 said there were no fatalities among his men but he knows of non-Malay officers who were killed or wounded during operations.

“We have to take note of all races who were involved in the war,” said Thambipill­ay who joined the police force in 1953.

Before his stint, he had joined as an auxiliary policeman and worked as a clerk/interprete­r in the police force.

He was commenting on the statement by the chairman of Ummah, an umbrella group for Muslim organisati­ons, Ismail Mina Ahmad who stated in a convention recently that only the Malays fought the British, Japanese and the communists.

Thambipill­ay recalled the shooting of former Perak police chief Tan Sri Khoo Chong Kong at a traffic light junction in Jalan Raja Musa Aziz and Fair Park by two Communist Party of Malaya (CPM) members on a motorcycle on Nov 13, 1975. They were later tried in court and hanged for the murder of the officer.

Thambipill­ay described Khoo as an intelligen­t officer who “knew the CPM organisati­on and their strategies well”.

His sacrifices had not gone unnoticed as the government named a road after him in the city.

According to Thambipill­ay, many non-Malays joined the armed forces, police and auxiliary teams like Area Security Units and home guards as special police constable.

Thambipill­ay who had served in communist hot spots like Sungai Siput, Kuala Kubu Baru, Sarawak and the Thai-Malaysia border said many non-Malay personnel received awards for their courage and bravery.

Meanwhile, in KOTA KINABALU, eight non-Malay civilians were given recognitio­n for their sacrifice for the nation during the Japanese occupation.

Their names were the latest to be inscribed on a plaque for fallen heroes at the Petagas World War II Memorial Park yesterday, joining 176 others.

The honoured heros were Lim Hock Beng, Mohinder Singh Harnam Singh Kalsi, Lothar Wong Manjaji, Vitalianus Joseph Lim Ubing, Paul Lee Fook Onn Paul Lee Onn, Simon Thien, Bung Ah Tee Stephen Pan Tet Liong and Chong Pin Sin.

 ??  ?? Richard Lim (right), a son of Lim Hock Beng, at the ceremony to honour eight non-Malays for their sacrifice to the nation during the Japanese occupation.
Richard Lim (right), a son of Lim Hock Beng, at the ceremony to honour eight non-Malays for their sacrifice to the nation during the Japanese occupation.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia