Bangkok Post

Anzac Day marked on Somme

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LILLE: Thousands of Australian­s gathered in the pre-dawn chill on the Somme in northern France yesterday for a poignant ceremony in memory of the soldiers who fought and died on the Western Front, a century on from the end of World War I.

Some 8,000 Australian­s made the round-the-world trip to mark a special centenary Anzac Day, Australia’s national day of remembranc­e on the Somme, scene of some of the most brutal battles of the 1914-18 conflict.

Tony McNiff said it was “spine tingling and extremely emotional” to have made it to the Australian National Memorial, just outside the town of Villers-Bretonneux, the site of a major victory for Australian troops in 1918.

“We’re really among the privileged few to be among the 8,000 here,” Mr McNiff, who served 35 years in the Australian air force, said.

Of the 295,000 Australian­s who came to fight on the Western Front, some 46,000 died — huge losses for the young nation, where the sacrifice remains deeply ingrained in the national identity.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, his French counterpar­t Edouard Philippe and Britain’s Prince Charles all paid tribute at the ceremony to the young men who volunteere­d for a war on the other side of the globe.

“The deeds of these young men have echoed down the years,” Mr Turnbull told the crowd, who huddled in the grey dawn as the Last Post bugle call rang out from the memorial’s tower.

“They suffered lice, rats, gas,” Mr Philippe said, urging leaders to keep memories of the war’s horrors alive.

“They suffered bombardmen­ts, lives cut short, cold and hunger.”

Like Mr Turnbull, he paid tribute to his country’s forces serving around the world in current conflicts, from Syria to anti-jihadist troops in west Africa.

Prince Charles said the “costly sacrifice” of the Australian troops would “forever be part of Australia’s identity”.

Dawn also marked 100 years to the day since Australian troops’ breakthrou­gh in Villers-Bretonneux, when they pulled off a major counter-offensive against German troops alongside British and French forces.

The audacious operation stopped a German advance that would have otherwise swept on to nearby Amiens, a strategic city for allied forces.

Monique and Yves Degremont, a retired couple from the northern city of Lille among the few French nationals in the crowd, said they had wanted to give thanks to Australian troops. “If the Australian­s hadn’t been there, things might have been different,” Monique said.

Mr Turnbull and Mr Philippe had on Tuesday opened a high-tech new museum at the Australian memorial designed to bring to life the country’s role on the Western Front.

The €63-million (2.4 billion baht) Sir John Monash Centre uses life-size videos of soldiers and a 360-degree cinema to showcase the role of Australian troops.

 ?? EPA ?? Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, centre, attends the Anzac Day dawn service at the Australian National Memorial at Villers-Bretonneux yesterday.
EPA Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, centre, attends the Anzac Day dawn service at the Australian National Memorial at Villers-Bretonneux yesterday.

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