FIRB: Xstrata/WMC
February 11, 2005Enhancing the Trans-Tasman Business Environment; Trans-Tasman Council on Banking Supervision; Cooperation on Competition; Investment Provisions; Accounting Standards; Common Currency – Press Conference, Wellington, New Zealand
February 17, 2005OFFICIALLY UNVEIL CHANGI FLAG
SHRINE OF REMEMBRANCE,
MELBOURNE
FRIDAY, 11 FEBRUARY 2005
To the Chairman of the Trustees, John Taylor, Major-General McLachlan of the
RSL, to Bill Flowers, thank you for your wonderful speech, your wonderful reminiscence
and the way in which you shared your experience today. Ladies and gentlemen,
but particularly to our POWs who are here with us today: – gentleman we are
honoured by your presence and we want to thank you for being here.
As someone who has lived in Melbourne all of my life, I know what the Shrine
of Remembrance means to our city, to our State and to our nation. It dominates
the main thoroughfare. If you look down Swanston Street your eye immediately
is drawn to it. It is a very substantial tourist attraction. And on ANZAC Day
it provides the setting for one the most memorable experiences that a person
can ever take part in.
On Remembrance Day, the light falls on the Stone of Remembrance. It was my
very great privilege recently to contribute to the building of this undercroft.
The displays that were built here were built so that we could tell the story
to new generations. So that new generations could remember the sacrifice and
honour and realise the great debt that they own to Australia’s servicemen
and women in the world wars and in other conflicts that Australian troops have
taken part in.
This Shrine physically honours the fallen, the servicemen and women, and the
story it tells we hope will help generations of Australians to honour them in
their heart because they will know the story, they will know the sacrifice and
they will always remember it.
And what a wonderful chapter we open today by having this flag from Changi.
Can you imagine if you were one of those POWs in Changi who signed their name
on a flag more than 60 years ago in captivity, in deprivation, walking past
that flag and seeing your signature there today?
Can you imagine the shock as that signature takes you back 60 years to the
time when you signed, wondering whether you would ever live out that war, whether
you would ever see your home again, whether you would ever see your loved ones
and then coming back to the prosperity of today and looking at that signature
and giving thanks to God for coming through and seeing our country and saying
it was worth fighting for, it was worth dying for. It was worth it to keep the
country free.
Imagine the shock if your signature is on that flag. Imagine the lesson for
the children, the grandchildren, the great grandchildren, to be told that story
as we have heard it here today.
This flag was taken down as the Australian troops came down the Malayan Peninsula
and then hidden throughout long years of war in awful conditions in a POW camp.
Of the 91 signatures that are there, 16 of those went up to work on the Burma
Thai Railway and never came back.
Imagine the story being told to the children and the grandchildren of how
this represents the spirit of Australian troops that weren’t going to
give in, that were going to be defiant in the midst of their suffering.
Imagine telling the story about how when it was unveiled that we had some
of them here with us. There are 13 surviving signatories. Today Ken Topliss,
Harry Shurey, Bluey Cummins and Paul Payne, who can see their signatures and
tell the stories, remember what it was like, and pass that down to the children
and the grandchildren.
In the preparation for the unveiling another veteran with connections to the
flag came forward and is with us today. Sergent Bill Cutler of the Royal Engineers
who was the seconded to Lord Louis Mountbatten’s Force that went to Changi
to re-establish the British presence was asked to fly the British flag as a
morale booster to the prisoners. As the regimental Sergent Major he handed the
flag to the men to hoist.
Aren’t these wonderful stories? Aren’t we honoured to have these
men here with us? And aren’t we honoured that the Walker family saw fit
to recover the flag and to put it here and to tell the story for the children
and the grandchildren in the years to come.
This is a very important part of this shrine, which is a very important part
of honouring our servicemen and women and throwing forward the story so that
the story can inspire the generations of the future.
We hope that the generations of the future never have to go through that kind
of privation and suffering but we do want them to understand how the privation
and suffering of others has given them so much. We want them to honour the legacy
that they have and inspire them to be worthy to carry it in the years that lie
ahead.
Thank you to the POWs, thank you to the Walker Foundation, thank you to the
RSL, thank you to the Shrine for letting us be part of that story which we hope
will go on for the generations to come. I hereby unveil the Changi prisoner-of-war
flag.