November 15, 2008 at 9:38 am
Just seen this posted on MSF by ‘Coronet’. Seems appropriate to post here as we are just past Rememberance day. Looks like closure for the families concerned at last.
Remains of 12 plane crash victims exhumed, airlifted
By IAN MCINTYRE
15-11-2008KOTA BARU: The remains of the 12 crew of the ill-fated British Royal Air
Force (RAF) Douglas DC 3 Dakota KN630 aircraft which crashed 58 years ago,
was airlifted from the rough terrain of Gua Musang to Kota Baru.
The remains, which authorities are hoping would be that of nine British
military personnel and three Malaysians, were brought to the Hospital
Universiti Sains Malaysia (HUSM)’s forensic unit late Friday.
There DNA testing is being done to verify the identities of the 12
crewmembers who perished during the height of the communist insurgency in
the then Malaya.
HUSM director Datuk Dr Zaidun Kamari confirmed the arrival of the remains
but declined further comment, saying the Armed Forces headquarters (Mindef)
would be release further information.
On Aug 25, 1950, flight KN630 took off from its base in Changi, Singapore to
Kota Baru where it picked up three local passengers, a Royal Federation of
Malaya police constable Mohamad Abdul Lalil @ Jalil (service number 9364),
an unnamed orang asli and a civilian attached to the Kelantan development
agency arm, Yaakup Mamat.
Enroute to a mission to lay down smoke markers for RAF Bombardier aircraft,
the DC3 Dakota crashed in the steep forested foothills in the Gua Musang
district.
A platoon of British troops went to the rescue and they reached the crash
site, but due to the communist threat, they hastily buried the dead in
makeshift graves.
In 2006, relatives of the British men appealed to London and Kuala Lumpur to
help recover their remains.
A team led by the army and aided by the police museum, local historians and
representatives of the British High Commission, including their military
forensic experts, was formed to extricate the remains and debris of the
historic aircraft.
It took the team some 12 months to find the exact location in the heavily
forested rough terrain and airlift the remains in Nuri helicopters due to
the difficulty in
However, they only managed to recover a 10m right wing and part of the plane’s
tail. The rest of the America-made aircraft is believed to have rusted away
or carried away by river water during floods.
The actual site was discovered off Kampung Penchang in Gua Musang with the
aid of orang asli trekkers and soldiers under the Eighth Brigade based in
Pengkalan Chepa last month after several earlier scouting missions.
In a related development, Police Museum director and historian Supt Syed
Zainal Abidin Syed Zain said the police managed to trace the next of kin of
Abdul Lalil and Yaakup last month.
The initial relatives traced were Abdul Lalil’s younger brother and Yaakup’s
grandchild in Muar (Johor) and Kuala Lumpur respectively.
He said if the DNA testing confirms the kinship, they would be invited to a
series of joint Malaysia-British military ceremonies soon.
The highlight would be a full military burial for the crewmembers at the
Commonwealth Military burial ground in Cheras, Kuala Lumpur.
The DC3 Dakota aircraft was a workhorse after World War II for the RAF in
Malaya with bases in Butterworth, Penang and Singapore.
This aircraft also flew over 2,500 sorties and did 4,000 hours of aerial
broadcasting in the psychological warfare against the communists who hid in
jungles.
Hope its of interest
By: ianwoodward9 - 5th July 2017 at 16:40
At the Museum of Army Flying later this year:
2 November – Lecture:
RAF Dakota KN630
Colonel Paul Edwards will talk briefly about the iconic Dakota DC3 and how it has been operated across the world before moving on to the tragic story of RAF Dakota KN630.
The aircraft crashed in the high jungle of northern Malaya in 1950 on operations against terrorists during the “Emergency”.
All 12 on board perished in the crash in an area considered to be “inaccessible” by virtue of the terrain, its occupation by terrorists and the high density of booby traps laid to prevent security forces entering the area.
This is his very personal account of how the aircraft was located after nearly 60 years and the remains of those servicemen carried out of the jungle for appropriate burial with full military honours.
The talk will include a short documentary made at the time by the RAF media team
By: Newforest - 5th December 2008 at 17:18
Appeal for relatives.
The Army is looking for relatives of Oliver Goldsmith and Ray Wilson, both of Birkenhead whose remains are believed to have been found.
By: critter592 - 22nd November 2008 at 20:02
A few more home. May they now rest in peace.
Thanks for posting Mark.