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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tatsuji_SugaTatsuji Suga - Wikipedia

    Lieutenant-Colonel Tatsuji Suga (菅辰次, Suga Tatsuji) (22 September 1885 – 16 September 1945) of the Imperial Japanese Army was the commander of all prisoner-of-war (POW) and civilian internment camps in Borneo, during World War II. A war criminal, Suga died by suicide five days after being taken prisoner by Australian forces ...

  2. 06 Jun 2021. Borneo’s Japanese War Criminals. Baba Masao, GOC, 37th Army based in Borneo. Col. Suga, Commander all prisoner-of-war (POW) & civilian internment camps, Borneo – Japanese-run internment camps at Batu Lintang, Kuching, Sarawak, Jesselton (later Kota Kinabalu), Sandakan and briefly on Labuan island.

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  3. When Tatsuji Suga met her, he ordered her to write The Life and Thoughts of an Internee. She agreed but titled her work Captivity. She prepared notes separately for another work in minute handwriting on margins of old newspapers, reverse of labels and Chinese tobacco papers. She hid them in George's toys, pillows, sleeping mat and also in tins.

  4. Lieutenant-Colonel Tatsuji Suga (菅辰次, Suga Tatsuji) (22 September 1885 – 16 September 1945) of the Imperial Japanese Army was the commander of all prisoner-of-war (POW) and civilian internment camps in Borneo, during World War II. A war criminal, Suga died by suicide five days after being taken prisoner by Australian forces in September 1945.

  5. Lieutenant Colonel Tatsuji Suga presided over a near-100 per cent death rate of Allied prisoners. He took his own life at the end of the war. Credit: AWM 116922, Courtesy of Random House

  6. 10 de may. de 2024 · Colonel Suga Tatsuji was the commandant of prisoner of war and internee camps in Borneo. He was apprehended as a war criminal and taken to a surrender camp at Labuan Island and tried for war crimes against Allied prisoners of war, especially in relation to the atrocities at Sandakan and Rimau.

  7. 3 de dic. de 2018 · Historians contributed it the strict discipline enforced by the camp commander Lieutenant-Colonel Tatsuji Suga. It was believed that Suga had a ‘soft spot’ for women and children, even allowing children to ride his car within the camp compound.