Gunner Cleary

If you escape the same thing will happen to you.

Albert Neil Cleary (known as Neil) was 25 years old when he died on 20 March 1945. His friends collected him from the gutter where his Japanese tormentors had thrown him, carried him to a stream, washed him and brought him back to their hut to die.

For two years Neil Cleary had been one of more than 2500 British and Australian prisoners of war (POW) building an aerodrome for the Japanese at Sandakan in Borneo. The first men had been brought to Sandakan by sea from Singapore in July 1942 and others joined them during early 1943. During 1942, their life was bearable and they lost very few men but in 1943 there was a change. New Formosan guards and the discovery of an Allied intelligence network led to harsh reprisals. Most of the officers were moved from Sandakan to Kuching, on the opposite coast of Borneo, a move that was to save their lives.

Those who remained at Sandakan were subjected to ever-harsher conditions. The POWs' health and diet deteriorated and, in late 1944, Allied bombing raids caused a further reduction in the men's daily rice ration. By January 1945, their Japanese rice issue stopped altogether and they were given approximately 85 grams per day from accumulated stores built up by the POWs themselves.

In January 1945, when the Allies were getting closer, the Japanese decided to move the large group of prisoners at Sandakan nearly 300 kilometres further west to the town of Ranau. Two groups of these debilitated and starving men were marched 260 kilometres through the jungle. Those who were too ill to leave Sandakan were left there to die and hundreds of other men died during the two death marches.

Neil Cleary survived the first march from Sandakan to Ranau and in March, he and a mate, Gunner Wally Crease, escaped from the camp at Ranau.

Cleary was recaptured and brought back to the camp where he was thrown into an empty area known as the 'Guard House'. Already showing signs of beatings, his arms were tied high up behind his back and he was made to kneel with a log tied behind his knees. Two Japanese guards kicked and punched him all over his body, including his neck. They caused further pain by jumping on the end of the log tied behind his knees. Every half-hour he was made to stand up. The blood would rush back into his lower legs causing even more pain. During the next three and a half-hours Cleary was beaten with rifle butts, sticks and anything else to hand.

All the time this was going on the guards would say to his friends:

If you escape the same thing will happen to you.

The beatings continued the next day and when Crease, the other escapee, was recaptured and returned to camp both men were give the same treatment all that afternoon. Witness Keith Botterill heard the men pleading with the guards to stop. This time the bashings continued throughout the night. Wally Crease managed to escape again the next morning but Japanese guards found him and shot him.

Keith Botterill, the only surviving witness to the beatings, was sent away from Ranau on a work detail. He returned four days later to discover that Cleary was still alive. This time he had been tied to a tree by his neck and was dressed only in a 'fundoshi', a small piece of cloth given to the POWs to cover their private parts. By then Cleary was filthy and covered in blood blisters and caked blood. He was suffering from dysentery and had been left to lie in his own excrement. Although the days were hot, the nights were cold and he would have suffered dreadfully.

His captors continued to hit him with fists and rifles. He remained in this condition for 11 or 12 days until the guards could see he was dying. Finally his friends were allowed to lift him up, wash him and take him away to die.

Only six men, all Australians, survived the Sandakan death marches. Keith Botterill, one of the survivors of Sandakan was able to report the appalling atrocities he had witnessed during his captivity. Not one of the British POWs survived.

It wasn't until after their liberation that the Allied officers who had been moved to Kuching in 1943 discovered the fate of their troops and the few officers who had remained with them.

In 1999, Nancy Patterson, Neil Cleary's sister participated in a pilgrimage to Sandakan to see where her brother had spent his final days. More than 50 years after his death, she still remembered her brother building a canoe when he was 15 or 16 years old and playing the mandolin at their home in Geelong

… sitting for hours shut in the lounge room playing all the popular songs of the day.


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Cite this page

DVA (Department of Veterans' Affairs) ( ), Gunner Cleary, DVA Anzac Portal, accessed 25 November 2024, https://anzacportal.dva.gov.au/wars-and-missions/world-war-ii-1939-1945/resources/australian-prisoners-war-1940-1945/gunner-cleary
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