January the 31st,
1942 : Only 55 days after the landing at Kota Bahru, the Japanese
had already won the battle for Malaya. And now
. the
battle for Singapore was to begin. Seventy miles of Singapore's
coastline lay vulnerable. Whilst the British were hastening
their defence preparations, Yamashita was getting ready for
the Japanese assault on Singapore.
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Under Lt-General Percival,
Singapore's coastline was divided into three combat zones
- the north, west and southern areas - with a reserve area
in the centre of the island. About 100,000 military personnel
from Australia, Great Britain and India, as well as soldiers
raised in Malaya and Singapore, prepared to defend Singapore.
The British also allowed the Malayan Communist Party to
help set up a Singapore Overseas Chinese Anti-Japanese Volunteer
Army. Led by a British officer, J.D. Dalley, these recruits,
a few hundred of them, were given some old weapons, and
only ten days of actual training in combat skills. This
was the Dalforce.
But the Japanese strategy
was a wily one - at midnight on the 7th
February 1942, Japanese troops landed unopposed on Pulau
Ubin. Opening fire on Singapore's north-east coast,
they gave the impression of an impending attack from that
direction.
On February
the 8th, however, the Japanese directed a strategic
air and artillery attack on the north-west coast instead.
By 9.30 that night, the first Japanese amphibious assault
on Singapore was launched. Undeterred by heavy casualties
suffered from Australian machine-gunners, wave upon wave
of Japanese troops landed on Singapore's north-west coast.
And by midnight of that day the Australian defence was broken.
On February
the 9th, Tengah Airfield fell to the Japanese and both
the villages at Choa Chu Kang and Ama Keng were captured.
Preparations were meanwhile
made for a Japanese landing on the beaches between the Kranji
River and the Causeway. By the 10th of February the
Japanese had successfully taken the Singapore side of the
Causeway.
With his troops well
established on the northern shores, Yamashita's next objective
was Bukit
Timah, for this area commanded the north-western approach
to Singapore town. Advancing eastwards along the Choa Chu
Kang and Jurong Roads, the Japanese army approached Bukit
Timah.
By the 11th
of February, Bukit Timah village was taken. With the
taking of Bukit Timah, Yamashita called upon Percival to
surrender. But Percival had strict orders
and they
were "to fight till the end." Pushing on eastward,
Japanese troops captured the Race Course area and as well
as the MacRitchie Reservoir.
On the eastern front
more Japanese troops from Pulau
Ubin landed at Punggol and Loyang. Meeting no resistance,
Upper Serangoon, Paya Lebar and then Geylang were taken.
Their next target - the Pasir
Panjang Ridge. There, the Japanese 18th Division fought
a bitter battle with the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the Malay
Regiment. Supported by men from the Australian forces,
the Malay Regiment fought stubbornly and kept the Japanese
onslaught at bay until the midnight of 12th February. As
the odds grew obviously too great, the "C" Company
of the Malay Regiment retreated to Bukit Chandu the following
day.
Up on Bukit Chandu, soldiers of the Malay
Regiment had run out of ammunition. True to the spirit of
"Ta'at dan Setia", they resorted to hand-to-hand
combat against the Japanese invaders. Point
226 or Bukit Chandu, was captured by afternoon, the
14th of February.
Enraged by the stubborn stand put up by
the Malay Regiment soldiers, the Japanese exacted revenge
by storming into the nearby Alexandra Hospital on the same
day, bayoneting and killing patients and staff on sight.
More than 200 died in the senseless Alexandra
Hospital massacre.
By this time the Japanese advance had forced
British troops to fall back to a perimeter around the Municipality.
This was their last defence. Around this the Japanese converged.
The end was imminent.
Not only were water supplies falling to a critical level but supplies including food, fuel and ammunition were also running low. These reasons along with mounting civilian casualties, led Percival made the momentous decision to surrender.
At the Ford Motor Factory in Bukit Timah
on the 15th of February at 10 past 6 that evening, the official
surrender was signed. It was a magnificent victory for Japan,
for the capture of Singapore signalled the end of British
power in the Far East. On the part of the British, Percival's
cable to the Supreme Commander of the American-British-Dutch-Australian
Command read : ALL RANKS HAVE DONE THEIR BEST.
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