Researchers have found in southwest China a cemetery built
during the Second World War where about 300 US pilots from the
squadron "Flying Tigers" were buried.
The cemetery lies in the woods in Puzhao village in the
northeastern suburbs of Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province, said Sun Guansheng, the head
of the Yunnan Flying Tigers Research Association.
About 300 Flying Tigers members and 500 Chinese airmen are
buried in the cemetery, previously located near a nunnery in the
village in 1943. The cemetery was moved to the current site in
1949, according to Sun.
"Many people came to pay their respect to the air warriors
before it was moved. However, few people are coming now," Sun
quoted local elder villagers as saying.
Many tombs have sunk decades after they were built. The cemetery
as a whole lacks adequate protection, Sun said, adding that the
association has called on the local government to repair and
protect it.
On August 1,1941, the American Volunteer Group, later nicknamed
the Flying Tigers, was formed under the leadership of US General
Claire Lee Chennaults to help China drive out the invading Japanese
troops.
The airmen's planes were painted with shark teeth. They were
known in China as "Fei Hu" (Flying Tigers) for their courage.
According to the research of Sun's association, 2,264 US "Flying
Tigers" pilots and more than 900 Chinese airmen who fought along
with them sacrificed their lives in the war against the
fascists.
Between December 1941 and September 1945, the Flying Tigers shot
down and blew up 2,600 Japanese military planes, destroyed 44
warships and killed 66,700 Japanese soldiers.
Chinese and American air forces also opened the famous Camel
Peak Aviation Route across the Himalayas, the so-called "death
route," to deliver urgently needed military supplies to support
China's war of resistance against Japanese aggression.
More than 2,000 planes from China and the United States were
used in the heroic flights. They succeeded in delivering 730, 000
tons of goods to 33,477 military personnel and recorded a flying
time totaling 1.5 million hours.
In order to commemorate these heroes, China erected the Monument
to Aviator Martyrs in the War of Resistance against Japanese
Aggression in August 1995 in the eastern city of Nanjing. Names of
more than 3,000 martyrs, including 870 Chinese, 2,186 Americans and
236 former Soviet Union soldiers, are inscribed on the monument in
Chinese, English and Russian.
(Xinhua News Agency August 31, 2007)