The New Zealand Herald

Troops’ remains home by October

Govt offers $1000 towards cost of memorial for each soldier returned

- Derek Cheng

The families of up to 36 New Zealand soldiers and their dependants who died overseas decades ago will have the remains of their loved ones returned by October this year.

The Government will also put $1000 towards a memorial for each of those repatriate­d, Veterans Minister Ron Mark said yesterday.

“I know it’s incredibly important for the whanau of our service personnel to know their loved ones are looked after,” Mark said.

The previous Government had approved the repatriati­on of soldiers and their dependents who were buried in Malaysia and Singapore.

The Cabinet has decided to expand that to now include soldiers and their dependents who died in Fiji, American Samoa, the United Kingdom and Korea.

The remains of 36 people are eligible for repatriati­on: 29 in Malaysia and Singapore, two in Fiji, one in American Samoa, two in the UK and two in Korea.

The repatriati­on was triggered by a petition on behalf of the group Families of the Forgotten Fallen, from former soldiers Paul Thomas and Andrew Peters, calling for the Government to bring home the bodies of New Zealand soldiers and their children who are buried in non-Commonweal­th war cemeteries.

Thomas served the Defence Force in the 1960s and 1970s, including in Vietnam. The petition came after a request from his mother to bring home his brother Adrian, a member of the original SAS squad, who was killed in action and buried in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1956.

Peters also served in Vietnam and is related to soldier Ike King, buried in Terendak, Malaysia.

Previously, repatriati­on was publicly funded for burials after 1971. Between 1955 and 1971, families had to cover the cost, and before that, personnel were buried close to where they died and not repatriate­d.

The previous National-led Government changed the policy and decided to put $10 million towards the repatriati­on.

Mark said $10m had been set aside but he expected the process to cost no more than $7m.

“The repatriati­ons are planned to begin in May and all going well will be completed by October”.

Last year, Vice-Chief of Defence Force Air Vice-Marshal Kevin Short told the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade select committee in November that 25 Army and two Air Force personnel and one child, all buried in either Singapore or Malaysia, would be coming home this year.

Five families had decided not to repatriate, Short said.

He said a large ceremony involving senior ministers and Defence Force staff was expected before the remains leave Malaysia. There would be a ceremony once the remains touch down in New Zealand before they are handed back to the families.

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