This is a shocking story of how Saltwater Crocodiles Devoured 500 Japanese Soldiers in Burma During World War 2
This is a shocking story of how
Saltwater Crocodiles Devoured 500 Japanese Soldiers in Burma During World War 2
The Ramree Island massacre of 1945, the deadliest crocodile attack recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records
Circa 1945 was the year when the Imperial Japan invasion of Asia was nearing its ends. On all fronts, they were attacked by the Allied forces in full strength, leaving them to either surrender or perish. However, one of the deadliest battles the Japanese soldiers had to endure was the Battle of Ramree, an island in Myanmar, formerly called Burma.
The Japanese were trapped with two kinds of predators: the British Army and deadly saltwater crocodiles.
Japanese Invasion of Burma
and deadly saltwater crocodiles.
Since the nineteenth century, the British ruled Burma from 1824 to 1948, from the Anglo-Burmese Wars through the creation of Burma as a province of British India to the establishment of an independently administered colony, and finally independence.
After three Anglo-Burma Wars (1825, 1852, and 1885), Burma was conquered and transformed into a British colony.
Burma became an official colony on January 1, 1886. The British ruled Burma as a part of India from 1919 until 1937. In 1937, Burma was made a crown colony of Britain. Britain, in part, used Burma as a buffer zone between India and the rest of Asia.
However, in 1942, in the midst of the Second World War, when the Empire of Japan controlled East Asia and Southeast Asia, Burma was no exemption.
The Japanese had assisted in forming the Burma Independence Army and trained the Thirty Comrades, who were the founders of the modern Armed Forces (Tatmadaw). The Burmese hoped to gain the support of the Japanese in expelling the British so that Burma could become independent.
Japanese Burma as an independent state on August 1, 1943, with a puppet government led by Ba Maw. However, many Burmese began to believe the Japanese had no intention of giving them absolute independence.
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