The Daily Telegraph

Captain Bhagtasing Pun

Won a Military Medal during the Malayan Emergency

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CAPTAIN BHAGTASING PUN, who has died aged 101, was awarded a Military Medal during the Emergency in Malaya.

The Emergency began in 1948. Communist terrorists, mostly Chinese, were intent on overthrowi­ng the colonial power and Bhagtasing, with others from 1st Battalion 2nd King Edward VII’S Own Gurkha Rifles (1/2 GR), was seconded to Ferret Force, a specialise­d unit, with the task of hunting them down.

On July 28 1951 he was in command of a platoon in an operation near Batu Anam, Johore. By painstakin­g reconnaiss­ance, he located a bandit camp without giving away the presence of his company and a two-platoon attack was launched.

Bhagtasing led his men with great determinat­ion. His skilful employment of fire and rifle grenades resulted in the death of 12 of the 14 bandits and the capture of another.

The citation for the award of an MM stated that he was largely responsibl­e for the devastatin­g effect of the attack. It added that throughout his service in the jungles of Malaya he had displayed the highest qualities of leadership, drive, cheerfulne­ss and initiative.

Bhagtasing was born in 1917 into yeoman farming stock in the village of Ramche in the heart of traditiona­l Gurkha recruiting grounds. Having enlisted in 1937, he joined 2 GR at Dehra Dun.

In 1938 he saw service in Waziristan on India’s North West Frontier and, in January 1942, he joined his Regiment’s 2nd Bn in Singapore. The battalion had fought costly battles against the Japanese in the retreat through Malaya before preparing defensive positions on the island.

Within two weeks of Bhagtasing’s arrival and without so much as sighting a Japanese, his Regiment was ordered to surrender. All ranks found the order inexplicab­le and deeply humiliatin­g. For three-anda-half years the remnants of the Battalion were prisoners of war of the Japanese. This searing experience made him determined to get to grips with the enemy.

Bhagtasing’s group of Gurkhas was held in Nee Soon Camp and he recalled the dreadful food and back-breaking work unloading Japanese ships and humping stores and ammunition around the island in the tropical heat. Close to the end of his captivity, he succumbed to fever and rambled incoherent­ly for days.

In September 1945, after the Japanese surrender, Bhagtasing returned with his battalion to Dehra Dun. After Indian Independen­ce, he transferre­d to the British Army and, in 1948, arrived back in Singapore with 1/2 GR. A series of successful engagement­s in Malaya gained him promotion to sergeant and establishe­d his reputation as a fearless jungle soldier.

In 1953, Colour Sergeant Bhagtasing was selected for the Gurkha contingent at the Queen’s Coronation and while in England he received his MM. Throughout the decade, he continued to operate with his company in the Malayan jungles and, in 1955, he was commission­ed as a Queen’s Gurkha Officer.

Promoted to captain in 1960, his final operationa­l service was to fly with his battalion to Brunei in 1962 to help put down an insurrecti­on. He retired in 1964 after 27 years’ exemplary service and returned to Ramche to farm carry out village welfare work and look after his family. He eventually moved to Pokhara, where he bought a house close to the British Gurkha camp.

His gentle nature belied his courage and tenacity on operations. He was the senior veteran of his regiment and the epitome of a gallant Gurkha soldier.

Captain Bhagtasing Pun’s wife, Naumati, died in 1991 and he is survived by two daughters and two sons. Another daughter predecease­d him. The daughters married soldiers in the Nepal, British and Indian Armies. His younger son had a successful career in the British Army in his father’s regiment.

Captain Bhagtasing Pun, born 1917, died August 15 2018

 ??  ?? POW of the Japanese in Singapore
POW of the Japanese in Singapore

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