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ITEM FORM
Item title: INAGAKI Ri'ichi interrogation report
Title (kanji)
Location:Australian War Memorial (AWM55 6/2)
View information about obtaining a copy of this document
AJRP details
AJRP module: Australian War Memorial official records
AJRP series: Allied Translator and Interpreter Section (ATIS) publications
AJRP sub-series: ATIS interrogation reports
AJRP folder:
Location details
Institution: Australian War Memorial
Call number: AWM55 6/2
Inst. series: AWM55
Inst. sub-series: AWM55 6/-
Item: IR-54 (Serial no. 95 )
Item qualities
Quantity / desc: 12 pages
Access: Open
Item type: Unpublished, Official
Category: Interrogation report
Item content
Creation date (d/m/y): 14/4/1943
Conflict code: Pacific War (1941-1945)
Keywords:IMPERIAL JAPANESE NAVY, INTERROGATION, INTELLIGENCE, CONSTRUCTION, OFFICER TRAINING, MORALE, PRISONERS OF WAR, FOOD SUPPLY
Australian unit names:
Allied unit names:
Japanese unit names:15th Naval Construction Bn
Names: INAGAKI Riichi, Naval Paymaster Lt
Languages: English
Area:Korea
Formosa (Taiwan) [Japan–Formosa]
Buna Area [Melanesia (PNG, Irian Jaya & Solomon Islands), Papua, Owen Stanley Range]
Giruwa [Melanesia (PNG, Irian Jaya & Solomon Islands), Papua, Owen Stanley Range, Buna Area]
Content: This is an Allied Translator and Interpreter Section (ATIS) interrogation report for Naval Paymaster Lieutenant INAGAKI Riichi of the 15th Naval Construction Battalion, who was captured in Giruwa on 21 January 1943. INAGAKI, a 27 year old Naval Lt from Nagoya, was suffering from malaria when he surrendered to Australian troops. His battalion consisted of civilian military employees, including Koreans and Formosans. INAGAKI was a Tokyo University graduate who had good working knowledge of English. He joined the Navy and received training to be a paymater and had spent less than three months at sea when he was captured. During the interrogation, INAGAKI provided extensive information on unit movement, the construction battalion, naval officer training, morale in Japan, perception in Japan towards a Japanese priosoner of war, and cannibalism.
Other information
Notes:              
Last modified:03/05/2009 09:04:42 AM
Source:AJRP staff



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