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Jesselton revolt

The Jesselton revolt (also known as the Jesselton uprising or the Double Tenth Revolt/Incident) was a revolt by a resistance movement known as the Kinabalu Guerrillas, comprising local Chinese, indigenous peoples, Eurasian and Sikh Indian of Jesselton, North Borneo and led by Albert Kwok, against the Japanese occupying forces of North Borneo.

Jesselton revolt

Some names of resistance movement members aside from the main group who were subsequently executed after the revolt.
Date9 October 1943 (1943-10-09) – 21 January 1944; 78 years ago (1944-01-21)
(3 months, 1 week and 5 days)
Location
Result

Tactical Japanese victory.

  • Failure of uprising, movement heavily suppressed by the Kenpeitai.
  • Surrender of several top movement leaders as the Japanese Kenpeitai continued to launch a systematic execution of civilian population if they did not turn themselves in.
  • Execution of Albert Kwok and others who surrendered.
Belligerents
Kinabalu Guerrillas Defence Forces  Empire of Japan
 • Occupied British Borneo
Commanders and leaders
Albert Kwok  (POW)
Hiew Syn Yong
Kong Tze Phui  (POW)
Li Tet Phui  (POW)
Tsen Tsau Kong  (POW)
Charles Peter  (POW)
Jules Stephens  (POW)
Budh Singh  (POW)
Sohan Singh  (POW)
Panglima Ali  (POW)
Orang Tua Arshad  (POW)
Musah
Duallis
Jemalul
Saruddin  (POW)
Subedar Dewa Singh
Shimizu
Units involved

Overseas Chinese Defence Association
 • Chinese National Salvation Association
North Borneo Volunteer Force
North Bornean indigenous volunteers
Philippine indigenous volunteers
Members of Indian Imperial Police


Limited arms support:

United States Forces in the Philippines
Imperial Japanese Army
 • Kenpeitai
Strength
100 Chinese
≈200 Bornean/Philippine indigenous peoples[note 1]/Eurasian/Sikh Indian
≈Hundreds Japanese police (1943)
≈Thousands Japanese troops (post 1943)
Casualties and losses
324 resistance members killed 50–90 police/soldiers killed[note 2]
2,000–4,000 civilians massacred by the Japanese

The movement succeeded in killing around 50–90 Japanese soldiers and temporarily took control of Jesselton (which after the war in 1946 would become the North Borneo and then later Sabah capital) and several neighbouring districts of Tuaran and Kota Belud. Owing to extremely limited arms supplies, however, the movement was forced to retreat to its hide-out. The Japanese Kenpeitai then launched attacks against coastal settlements in western North Borneo to find the leader and members of the guerrilla force, with many innocent civilians suffering the various atrocities that have become synonymous with Japanese conquest in the Pacific War.

The leader of the revolt finally decided to surrender following Japanese threats to execute more civilians if the guerrillas did not turn themselves in. Following the arrest and subsequent execution of the rebel alliance, the Japanese returned to administer North Borneo until 1945 when the main Allied liberation mission arrived.

Background

 
Albert Kwok, the main leader of Kinabalu Guerrillas.

Due to persistently harsh rule under the Japanese occupation, resistance against the Japanese developed, especially on the west coast of North Borneo, where a revolt was led by Albert Kwok with the members comprising mostly Chinese and some indigenous peoples.[1][2] Kwok, a local Teochew Chinese from Kuching in neighbouring Sarawak, had previously been working with the China Red Cross and serving under the Kuomintang of Chiang Kai-shek,[3][4] before returning to Borneo through Malaya in 1940.[5][6] During his time in China, Kwok was also a student of the Seventh-day Adventist Mission School in Canton. He arrived in Jesselton on 15 May 1941 and started a medical practice treating piles.[4][7]

In February 1942, Kwok wanted to establish contact with the Australians or Americans in eastern North Borneo, but he was unable to continue his trek by foot across the island jungle when he reached Pensiangan, which had a great number of Japanese troops.[3] He needed to establish relations with the Allied movements, especially the United States Forces in the Philippines (USFIP), as they were the sole armed resistance movement in the region at the time which had a good supply of firearms.[8] After he managed to establish contact with the American forces in the Philippines with the help of a fellow Chinese businessman named Lim Keng Fatt,[8][9] a Muslim cleric (Imam) named Marajukim from Sulu who was part of the resistance movement in the Philippines approached Kwok in Jesselton where he hence departed to Tawi-Tawi for training.[10] From there, they travelled further to Sulu and met Lieutenant Colonel Alejandro Suarez, learning of resistance movement operations in the Philippine archipelago.[8][11][12]

In May 1943, Kwok returned to Jesselton greatly determined to liberate North Borneo. Upon arrival he first contacted the Overseas Chinese Defence Association (OCDA), with whose help he acquired medical equipment and cash donations for the support of the resistance in Sulu.[13] Once again, in June 1943, he travelled with Marajukim to the Philippines. Through the mediation of Suarez, he met with the representatives of the US army and was commissioned as a Lieutenant on 1 July 1943.[14] Upon his second return to North Borneo, Kwok arrived with three pistols, a box of hand grenades, and a promise to be given more weapons.[15] However, in the end he could not induce the guerrillas in the Sulu Archipelago to send more firearms, and he was forced to launch a revolt with limited supplies.[16] A resistance group under his leadership was then established on 21 September 1943, with the group calling themselves the Chinese National Salvation Association (CNSA),[17] a branch of the OCDA.[16] With collaboration between the Chinese and indigenous peoples, the group were subsequently known as Kinabalu Guerrillas Defence Force.[11][18]

Uprising

 
A plate commemorating the 324 fallen resistance members as well as victims of Japanese massacre in Petagas.

As the date of execution for a pending Japanese decree to seize any in opposition to the Japanese administration loomed closer, the resistance group was forced to launch their revolt ahead of schedule. With many of his members armed with only melee weapons such as parang, spear and kris,[19] the movement launched their attack from 9 October 1943 and temporarily retook Jesselton, Tuaran, and Kota Belud from the Japanese, leaving around 50–90 casualties on the Japanese side.[20][21][22]

In the combined land and sea attack on the Japanese, most inhabitants of the islands around the coastal areas contributed ships to the movement. Native Bajau-Suluk leaders such as Panglima Ali (Sulug Island), Jemalul (Mantanani Islands), Orang Tua Arshad (Udar Island), and Saruddin (Dinawan Island) contributed to the revolt mostly through attacks from the sea.[23] Both Jemalul and Saruddin volunteered themselves from the Philippines to lead the Binadans of Mantanani and the Dinawan Islands.[24]

From land, the revolt was supported by native Dusun-Murut leaders such as Musah representing the Dusun community and Duallis for the Murut, as well as members of the Indian Imperial Police led by Constable Subedar Dewa Singh,[23] and administration and police members of the former colonial authorities of North Borneo, mostly serving under the aegis of the North Borneo Volunteer Force (NBVF) led by Jules Stephens and Charles Peter,[23] as well as Sergeant Bud Singh and Corporal Sohan Singh.[25]

After the successful revolt, the resistance movement under OCDA and NBVF jointly hoisted the flag of the Republic of China and Union Jack on 10 October 1943.[8] Most of the members of the OCDA were loyal to the Republic of China while the NBVF remained loyal to the United Kingdom, although the NBVF were not even recognised by the British government.[8]

With Imperial Japanese reinforcements from Kuching en route to suppress the rebellion, however, Kwok along with other members of the resistance were forced to retreat to their hide-out. The OCDA celebrated the birthday of Sun Yat-sen, the founder of Kuomintang and subsequently the Republic of China, by hoisting the national flag again and singing the national anthem of the Republic of China on 12 November 1943.[8]

Aftermath and legacy

 
The Petagas War Memorial built on the site of execution to honour the sacrifices of Kinabalu Guerrillas.

Following the arrival of Japanese reinforcements, the Japanese authorities subsequently launched a ruthless counter-offensive by bombing coastal settlements from Kota Belud to Membakut and by machine-gunning the North Borneo population.[22][26] Almost every village in the area was burnt down, with around 2,000–4,000 innocent civilians executed— mostly belonging to the Bajau-Suluk civilian population.[27][28] After threatening to kill more civilians if the leaders of the uprising did not turn themselves in, Kwok finally surrendered under duress, along with several of his top officers. In all, Kwok and some 175 people who for the most part had nothing to do with the uprising were executed by the Japanese on 21 January 1944 in Petagas, Putatan.[17]

After the war, the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE) set-up in 1946 to prosecute the many Japanese war crimes concluded that during the resistance movement led by the Chinese and indigenous peoples in North Borneo, the Kenpeitai had been involved in a reign of terror, arresting, torturing, and massacring hundreds of Chinese rebels while apparently systematically exterminating the coastal population of Suluk people.[29][30] The sacrifice of the movement was honoured with a memorial in Petagas, the Petagas War Memorial, today just east of the Kota Kinabalu International Airport.

Notes

  1. ^ Comprising Bajau-Binadan-Suluk/Dusun-Murut.
  2. ^ Including unspecified numbers of Formosan civilians.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Tarling 2001, p. 196.
  2. ^ Ham 2013, p. 166.
  3. ^ a b Tregonning 1960, p. 88.
  4. ^ a b Danny 1998, p. 154.
  5. ^ Goodwin 1953, p. 31.
  6. ^ Evans 1990, p. 50.
  7. ^ Julitta 2005, p. 312.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Kratoska 2013, p. 124.
  9. ^ Reece 1998, p. 162.
  10. ^ Julitta 2005, p. 318.
  11. ^ a b Evans 1990, p. 52.
  12. ^ Dick 1983, p. 55.
  13. ^ Evans 1990, p. 51.
  14. ^ Julitta 2005, p. 328.
  15. ^ Kratoska 2013, p. 125.
  16. ^ a b Tregonning 1960, p. 89.
  17. ^ a b Danny 2004, p. 116.
  18. ^ Kratoska 2013, p. 128.
  19. ^ Abbas & Bali 1985, p. 159.
  20. ^ Kratoska 2013, p. 111.
  21. ^ Luping, Chin & Dingley 1978, p. 40.
  22. ^ a b Ooi 1999, p. 56.
  23. ^ a b c Ooi 2010, p. 164.
  24. ^ Dick 1983, p. 47.
  25. ^ Hwang 2010.
  26. ^ Ooi 2010, p. 186.
  27. ^ Ooi 2013, p. 77.
  28. ^ Kratoska 2013, p. 113.
  29. ^ Watt 1985, p. 210.
  30. ^ Thurman & Sherman 2001, p. 123.

References

  • Goodwin, J. W. (1953). Eastern World. Far Eastern.
  • Tregonning, K. G. (1960). North Borneo. H.M. Stationery Office.
  • Luping, Margaret; Chin, Wen; Dingley, E. Richard (1978). Kinabalu, Summit of Borneo. Sabah Society.
  • Dick, Crofton Horton (1983). Ring of fire: Australian guerrilla operations against the Japanese in World War II. Secker & Warburg. ISBN 978-0-436-20157-8.
  • Watt, Donald Cameron (1985). The Tokyo War Crimes Trial: Index and Guide. International Military Tribunal for the Far East. Garland. ISBN 978-0-8240-4774-0.
  • Abbas, Ismail; Bali, K. (1985). Peristiwa-peristiwa berdarah di Sabah (in Malay). Institute of Language and Literature, Ministry of Education (Malaysia).
  • Evans, Stephen R. (1990). Sabah (North Borneo): Under the Rising Sun Government. Tropical Press.
  • Reece, Bob (1998). Masa Jepun: Sarawak Under the Japanese, 1941-1945. Sarawak Literary Society. ISBN 978-983-9115-06-2.
  • Danny, Wong Tze-Ken (1998). The Transformation of an Immigrant Society: A Study of the Chinese of Sabah. Asean Academic. ISBN 978-1-901919-16-5.
  • Ooi, Keat Gin (1999). Rising Sun over Borneo: The Japanese Occupation of Sarawak, 1941–1945. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-27300-3.
  • Thurman, Malcolm Joseph; Sherman, Christine (2001). War Crimes: Japan's World War II Atrocities. Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-56311-728-2.
  • Tarling, Nicholas (2001). A Sudden Rampage: The Japanese Occupation of Southeast Asia, 1941-1945. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 978-1-85065-584-8.
  • Danny, Wong Tze-Ken (2004). Historical Sabah: The Chinese. Natural History Publications (Borneo). ISBN 978-983-812-104-0.
  • Julitta, Shau Hua Lim (2005). Pussy's in the well: Japanese occupation of Sarawak, 1941-1945. Research and Resource Centre, SUPP Headquarters. ISBN 978-983-41998-2-1.
  • Hwang, Andrew (2010). . The Star. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017.
  • Ooi, Keat Gin (2010). (PDF). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-85054-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 October 2017.
  • Ooi, Keat Gin (2013). Post-war Borneo, 1945-50: Nationalism, Empire and State-Building. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-05803-7.
  • Ham, Paul (2013). Sandakan. Transworld. ISBN 978-1-4481-2626-2.
  • Kratoska, Paul H. (2013). Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-12514-0.

Further reading

  • Maxwell, J. Hall (1965). Kinabalu Guerrillas: An Account of the Double Tenth 1934 [i.e. 1943]. Borneo Literature Bureau.
  • Brooks, Ronald J. (1995). Under Five Flags. Pentland Press. ISBN 978-1-85821-322-4.
  • Danny, Wong Tze-Ken (2006). (PDF). Sabah Society Journal. Department of History, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya. pp. 19–30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 October 2017.
  • Danny, Wong Tze-Ken (2007). "The Petagas War Memorial and the Creation of a Heroic Past in Sabah". Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 80 (2 (293)): 19–32. JSTOR 41493694.
  • Daily Express (2013). . Daily Express. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017.
  • Lajiun, Jenne (2015). "Relatives share stories of Sabah fallen heroes". The Borneo Post.
  • Daily Express (2015). . Daily Express. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017.
  • Daily Express (2017). . Daily Express. Archived from the original on 28 October 2017.
  • Ralon, Larry (2019). . Daily Express. Archived from the original on 22 January 2019.

jesselton, revolt, this, article, about, revolt, north, borneo, incident, during, japanese, occupation, singapore, double, tenth, incident, also, known, jesselton, uprising, double, tenth, revolt, incident, revolt, resistance, movement, known, kinabalu, guerri. This article is about the revolt in North Borneo For the incident during the Japanese occupation in Singapore see Double Tenth Incident The Jesselton revolt also known as the Jesselton uprising or the Double Tenth Revolt Incident was a revolt by a resistance movement known as the Kinabalu Guerrillas comprising local Chinese indigenous peoples Eurasian and Sikh Indian of Jesselton North Borneo and led by Albert Kwok against the Japanese occupying forces of North Borneo Jesselton revoltSome names of resistance movement members aside from the main group who were subsequently executed after the revolt Date9 October 1943 1943 10 09 21 January 1944 78 years ago 1944 01 21 3 months 1 week and 5 days LocationJesselton British North BorneoResultTactical Japanese victory Failure of uprising movement heavily suppressed by the Kenpeitai Surrender of several top movement leaders as the Japanese Kenpeitai continued to launch a systematic execution of civilian population if they did not turn themselves in Execution of Albert Kwok and others who surrendered BelligerentsKinabalu Guerrillas Defence Forces Empire of Japan Occupied British BorneoCommanders and leadersAlbert Kwok POW Hiew Syn Yong Kong Tze Phui POW Li Tet Phui POW Tsen Tsau Kong POW Charles Peter POW Jules Stephens POW Budh Singh POW Sohan Singh POW Panglima Ali POW Orang Tua Arshad POW Musah Duallis Jemalul Saruddin POW Subedar Dewa SinghShimizuUnits involvedOverseas Chinese Defence Association Chinese National Salvation Association North Borneo Volunteer Force North Bornean indigenous volunteers Philippine indigenous volunteers Members of Indian Imperial Police Limited arms support United States Forces in the PhilippinesImperial Japanese Army KenpeitaiStrength100 Chinese 200 Bornean Philippine indigenous peoples note 1 Eurasian Sikh Indian Hundreds Japanese police 1943 Thousands Japanese troops post 1943 Casualties and losses324 resistance members killed50 90 police soldiers killed note 2 2 000 4 000 civilians massacred by the JapaneseThe movement succeeded in killing around 50 90 Japanese soldiers and temporarily took control of Jesselton which after the war in 1946 would become the North Borneo and then later Sabah capital and several neighbouring districts of Tuaran and Kota Belud Owing to extremely limited arms supplies however the movement was forced to retreat to its hide out The Japanese Kenpeitai then launched attacks against coastal settlements in western North Borneo to find the leader and members of the guerrilla force with many innocent civilians suffering the various atrocities that have become synonymous with Japanese conquest in the Pacific War The leader of the revolt finally decided to surrender following Japanese threats to execute more civilians if the guerrillas did not turn themselves in Following the arrest and subsequent execution of the rebel alliance the Japanese returned to administer North Borneo until 1945 when the main Allied liberation mission arrived Contents 1 Background 2 Uprising 3 Aftermath and legacy 4 Notes 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 Further readingBackground Edit Albert Kwok the main leader of Kinabalu Guerrillas Due to persistently harsh rule under the Japanese occupation resistance against the Japanese developed especially on the west coast of North Borneo where a revolt was led by Albert Kwok with the members comprising mostly Chinese and some indigenous peoples 1 2 Kwok a local Teochew Chinese from Kuching in neighbouring Sarawak had previously been working with the China Red Cross and serving under the Kuomintang of Chiang Kai shek 3 4 before returning to Borneo through Malaya in 1940 5 6 During his time in China Kwok was also a student of the Seventh day Adventist Mission School in Canton He arrived in Jesselton on 15 May 1941 and started a medical practice treating piles 4 7 In February 1942 Kwok wanted to establish contact with the Australians or Americans in eastern North Borneo but he was unable to continue his trek by foot across the island jungle when he reached Pensiangan which had a great number of Japanese troops 3 He needed to establish relations with the Allied movements especially the United States Forces in the Philippines USFIP as they were the sole armed resistance movement in the region at the time which had a good supply of firearms 8 After he managed to establish contact with the American forces in the Philippines with the help of a fellow Chinese businessman named Lim Keng Fatt 8 9 a Muslim cleric Imam named Marajukim from Sulu who was part of the resistance movement in the Philippines approached Kwok in Jesselton where he hence departed to Tawi Tawi for training 10 From there they travelled further to Sulu and met Lieutenant Colonel Alejandro Suarez learning of resistance movement operations in the Philippine archipelago 8 11 12 In May 1943 Kwok returned to Jesselton greatly determined to liberate North Borneo Upon arrival he first contacted the Overseas Chinese Defence Association OCDA with whose help he acquired medical equipment and cash donations for the support of the resistance in Sulu 13 Once again in June 1943 he travelled with Marajukim to the Philippines Through the mediation of Suarez he met with the representatives of the US army and was commissioned as a Lieutenant on 1 July 1943 14 Upon his second return to North Borneo Kwok arrived with three pistols a box of hand grenades and a promise to be given more weapons 15 However in the end he could not induce the guerrillas in the Sulu Archipelago to send more firearms and he was forced to launch a revolt with limited supplies 16 A resistance group under his leadership was then established on 21 September 1943 with the group calling themselves the Chinese National Salvation Association CNSA 17 a branch of the OCDA 16 With collaboration between the Chinese and indigenous peoples the group were subsequently known as Kinabalu Guerrillas Defence Force 11 18 Uprising Edit A plate commemorating the 324 fallen resistance members as well as victims of Japanese massacre in Petagas As the date of execution for a pending Japanese decree to seize any in opposition to the Japanese administration loomed closer the resistance group was forced to launch their revolt ahead of schedule With many of his members armed with only melee weapons such as parang spear and kris 19 the movement launched their attack from 9 October 1943 and temporarily retook Jesselton Tuaran and Kota Belud from the Japanese leaving around 50 90 casualties on the Japanese side 20 21 22 In the combined land and sea attack on the Japanese most inhabitants of the islands around the coastal areas contributed ships to the movement Native Bajau Suluk leaders such as Panglima Ali Sulug Island Jemalul Mantanani Islands Orang Tua Arshad Udar Island and Saruddin Dinawan Island contributed to the revolt mostly through attacks from the sea 23 Both Jemalul and Saruddin volunteered themselves from the Philippines to lead the Binadans of Mantanani and the Dinawan Islands 24 From land the revolt was supported by native Dusun Murut leaders such as Musah representing the Dusun community and Duallis for the Murut as well as members of the Indian Imperial Police led by Constable Subedar Dewa Singh 23 and administration and police members of the former colonial authorities of North Borneo mostly serving under the aegis of the North Borneo Volunteer Force NBVF led by Jules Stephens and Charles Peter 23 as well as Sergeant Bud Singh and Corporal Sohan Singh 25 After the successful revolt the resistance movement under OCDA and NBVF jointly hoisted the flag of the Republic of China and Union Jack on 10 October 1943 8 Most of the members of the OCDA were loyal to the Republic of China while the NBVF remained loyal to the United Kingdom although the NBVF were not even recognised by the British government 8 With Imperial Japanese reinforcements from Kuching en route to suppress the rebellion however Kwok along with other members of the resistance were forced to retreat to their hide out The OCDA celebrated the birthday of Sun Yat sen the founder of Kuomintang and subsequently the Republic of China by hoisting the national flag again and singing the national anthem of the Republic of China on 12 November 1943 8 Aftermath and legacy Edit The Petagas War Memorial built on the site of execution to honour the sacrifices of Kinabalu Guerrillas Following the arrival of Japanese reinforcements the Japanese authorities subsequently launched a ruthless counter offensive by bombing coastal settlements from Kota Belud to Membakut and by machine gunning the North Borneo population 22 26 Almost every village in the area was burnt down with around 2 000 4 000 innocent civilians executed mostly belonging to the Bajau Suluk civilian population 27 28 After threatening to kill more civilians if the leaders of the uprising did not turn themselves in Kwok finally surrendered under duress along with several of his top officers In all Kwok and some 175 people who for the most part had nothing to do with the uprising were executed by the Japanese on 21 January 1944 in Petagas Putatan 17 After the war the International Military Tribunal for the Far East IMTFE set up in 1946 to prosecute the many Japanese war crimes concluded that during the resistance movement led by the Chinese and indigenous peoples in North Borneo the Kenpeitai had been involved in a reign of terror arresting torturing and massacring hundreds of Chinese rebels while apparently systematically exterminating the coastal population of Suluk people 29 30 The sacrifice of the movement was honoured with a memorial in Petagas the Petagas War Memorial today just east of the Kota Kinabalu International Airport Notes Edit Comprising Bajau Binadan Suluk Dusun Murut Including unspecified numbers of Formosan civilians Footnotes Edit Tarling 2001 p 196 Ham 2013 p 166 a b Tregonning 1960 p 88 a b Danny 1998 p 154 Goodwin 1953 p 31 Evans 1990 p 50 Julitta 2005 p 312 a b c d e f Kratoska 2013 p 124 Reece 1998 p 162 Julitta 2005 p 318 a b Evans 1990 p 52 Dick 1983 p 55 Evans 1990 p 51 Julitta 2005 p 328 Kratoska 2013 p 125 a b Tregonning 1960 p 89 a b Danny 2004 p 116 Kratoska 2013 p 128 Abbas amp Bali 1985 p 159 Kratoska 2013 p 111 Luping Chin amp Dingley 1978 p 40 a b Ooi 1999 p 56 a b c Ooi 2010 p 164 Dick 1983 p 47 Hwang 2010 Ooi 2010 p 186 Ooi 2013 p 77 Kratoska 2013 p 113 Watt 1985 p 210 Thurman amp Sherman 2001 p 123 References EditGoodwin J W 1953 Eastern World Far Eastern Tregonning K G 1960 North Borneo H M Stationery Office Luping Margaret Chin Wen Dingley E Richard 1978 Kinabalu Summit of Borneo Sabah Society Dick Crofton Horton 1983 Ring of fire Australian guerrilla operations against the Japanese in World War II Secker amp Warburg ISBN 978 0 436 20157 8 Watt Donald Cameron 1985 The Tokyo War Crimes Trial Index and Guide International Military Tribunal for the Far East Garland ISBN 978 0 8240 4774 0 Abbas Ismail Bali K 1985 Peristiwa peristiwa berdarah di Sabah in Malay Institute of Language and Literature Ministry of Education Malaysia Evans Stephen R 1990 Sabah North Borneo Under the Rising Sun Government Tropical Press Reece Bob 1998 Masa Jepun Sarawak Under the Japanese 1941 1945 Sarawak Literary Society ISBN 978 983 9115 06 2 Danny Wong Tze Ken 1998 The Transformation of an Immigrant Society A Study of the Chinese of Sabah Asean Academic ISBN 978 1 901919 16 5 Ooi Keat Gin 1999 Rising Sun over Borneo The Japanese Occupation of Sarawak 1941 1945 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 349 27300 3 Thurman Malcolm Joseph Sherman Christine 2001 War Crimes Japan s World War II Atrocities Turner Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 56311 728 2 Tarling Nicholas 2001 A Sudden Rampage The Japanese Occupation of Southeast Asia 1941 1945 C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 978 1 85065 584 8 Danny Wong Tze Ken 2004 Historical Sabah The Chinese Natural History Publications Borneo ISBN 978 983 812 104 0 Julitta Shau Hua Lim 2005 Pussy s in the well Japanese occupation of Sarawak 1941 1945 Research and Resource Centre SUPP Headquarters ISBN 978 983 41998 2 1 Hwang Andrew 2010 Remember the North Borneo resistance fighters The Star Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 Ooi Keat Gin 2010 The Japanese Occupation of Borneo 1941 1945 PDF Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 85054 1 Archived from the original PDF on 25 October 2017 Ooi Keat Gin 2013 Post war Borneo 1945 50 Nationalism Empire and State Building Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 05803 7 Ham Paul 2013 Sandakan Transworld ISBN 978 1 4481 2626 2 Kratoska Paul H 2013 Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 12514 0 Further reading EditMaxwell J Hall 1965 Kinabalu Guerrillas An Account of the Double Tenth 1934 i e 1943 Borneo Literature Bureau Brooks Ronald J 1995 Under Five Flags Pentland Press ISBN 978 1 85821 322 4 Danny Wong Tze Ken 2006 The Kinabalu Guerrillas in Local and National History PDF Sabah Society Journal Department of History Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences University of Malaya pp 19 30 Archived from the original PDF on 24 October 2017 Danny Wong Tze Ken 2007 The Petagas War Memorial and the Creation of a Heroic Past in Sabah Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 80 2 293 19 32 JSTOR 41493694 Daily Express 2013 Granddaughter seeks apology for massacre Daily Express Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Lajiun Jenne 2015 Relatives share stories of Sabah fallen heroes The Borneo Post Daily Express 2015 Albert Kwok s daring raid Daily Express Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 Daily Express 2017 82 year old recalls execution of hero dad in Petagas Daily Express Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Ralon Larry 2019 Man recalls how father brother perished in war Daily Express Archived from the original on 22 January 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jesselton revolt amp oldid 1096083613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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