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Mohandas Karamchand Ghandi launches the 'Quit India' movement.

Soon after the surrender of Hong Kong, the Japanese began a campaign to try to win over their Indian POWs and of the Colony's Indian communities. They attempted to recruit soldiers to the pro-Japanese Indian National Army and they set up the Indian Independence League to provide civilian support for that Army and for Japanese agitation against British rule. 

At the start of WW11, Ghandi had originally hoped for some kind of a deal with the British, as, although remaining true to his principle of non-violence, he understood the racism and brutality that Britain was fighting. However, disillusioned by the failure of London to come up with what he regarded as an acceptable guarantee as to India's future, today he launches a campaign of civil disobedience against the Raj. 'Quit India' was not supported by many influential forces in India, and soon Ghandi, Pandit Nehru and most of the Congress Party leaders will be in prison, but today's events will continue to resonate in India and the rest of Asia, including Hong Kong, to the end of the war and beyond. The power of the movement will not depend just on Ghandi's personal prestige, immense though this is; he is articulating discontent and defiance that has now come to be widespread in India:

Quite suddenly the feeling of awe for the state, the izzat or 'face' of the British Raj, which more than troops and police had sustained foreign rule, simply vanished, melting away in the warm monsoon rains.

A major factor in this change in attitude was the general success of the Japanese troops so far and in particular the spectacle of the defeated troops and wretched civilian refugees fleeing through north-eastern India after the Burma rout of early 1942.

Source:

Tim Harper and Chritsopher Bayly, Forgotten Armies, 2004, Kindle Edition Location 4875.

OBJECTIVE: Bomb Tien Ho airfield at Canton

TIME OVER TARGET: ~6:20 a.m.

AMERICAN UNITS AND AIRCRAFT: Five B-25C from 11th Bomb Squadron (341st Medium Bomb Group) escorted by 7 P-40Es from 23rd Fighter Group.  All aircraft are from the China Air Task Force.

AMERICAN PILOTS AND AIRCREW: Major Dalene E. Bailey (B-25s); Captain Charles Sawyer; 1st Lt. Patrick H. Daniels; 1st Lt. Charles H. Dubois; 1st Lt. Harold K. Stuart (P-40s)

ORDNANCE EXPENDED: Chinese 50-kg incendiary bombs and 17-kg fragmentation bombs, plus Russian 100-kg general-purpose bombs

RESULTS: Bombs hit Tien Ho airfield as well as docks and godowns near railroad station

JAPANESE UNITS, AIRCRAFT, AND PILOTS: One recon plane from an unknown JAAF unit apparently spots the incoming American aircraft, which gives the Japanese time to scramble six Ki-27 and three Ki-43 fighter aircraft, most likely from the 24th Sentai and 54th Sentai, respectively.

AIRCRAFT LOSSES: American P-40 pilots claim to shoot down one Ki-27 and one Ki-43.  There are no American losses.

SOURCES: Original 11th Bomb Squadron mission report in the Air Force Historical Research Agency archives at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama.  I do not, however, have the mission report for the P-40s.

Information compiled by Steven K. Bailey, author of Bold Venture: The American Bombing of Japanese-Occupied Hong Kong, 1942-1945 (Potomac Books/University of Nebraska Press, 2019).

'Amateur Nite' concert.  Gimson made good speech at the end. Danny Wilson (Peggy's husband) amazingly good in impressions.  People lying back on the grass in the darkness, smoking.  Lightning sometimes.  Hottest day we've had.

Swimming, I wore new yellow bathing costume made this afternoon from Welfare shirt. Olive and Mabel have blue ones.  Mum's old Jantzen bathing costume is in camp.  ((Mum saw it hanging on the clothes line in the courtyard, and recognised it by its large size and the huge button she had sewn on it as the original one was too small)).   Mrs Fisher has it, she got it from Mrs Greenberg who died early on in camp, who apparently got it from the matshed at Repulse Bay ((where we kept our swimming gear pre-war))

Row with Mrs G about space in room.

Grand sunny day, beautiful sunset and smooth going. We are to arrive in Rio Monday a.m. Have a shore leave and stay about 2 days.

Twigs for firewood

More $75 parcels collected

Rice cooked like congee

”AMATEUR NITE” - D. Wilson, Gilchrist, Wilkinson (2) & Drewery won prizes 

Cyril Brown, M.C.

((Possibly J Q Gilchrist, not sure about the others.))((Barbara Anslow: The "Wilkinson (2)"  were probably Marjorie and Maureen Wilkinson aged about 11 and 12, the younger of the 3 Wilkinson girls in camp with their parents and brothers.  They often sang, had very good voices. "Drewery" is probably Irene Drewery, then about 10 or 11.))

Schönes Tag. Amatuer Nacht Koncert. Es war sehr gut. Geswommt.

((Lovely day.

Amateur Night Concert. It was very good.

Can't translate 'Geswommt'. UPDATE 9 Aug 2012: Jill Fell writes -

R.E. JONES's German is not perfect at this stage. His 'geswommt' should be 'geschwommen'. He means 'swam'.

))

The P.M.O. remained at the Military Hospital , Bowen Road , until July , 1942 , after which he was transferred to the prisoner - of - war camp at Argyle Street , Kowloon . He remained in this camp until May 1944 .