Post by meo4 on Aug 17, 2012 22:01:40 GMT 12
80 years ago today ,was logging into computer noticed this under today in history .
A total of 118 New Zealand prisoners of war died when the Italian transport ship Nino Bixio was torpedoed by a British submarine in the Mediterranean. Their deaths, combined with the 44 New Zealanders lost on the prisoner ship Jantzen in December 1941, accounted for nearly a third of New Zealand POW fatalities during the Second World War.
The Nino Bixio was hit while transporting Allied POWs from Libya to Italy. With another unmarked prison ship, the Sestriere, it had set sail from Benghazi for Brindisi on 16 August 1942, escorted by two destroyers and two torpedo boats. Crammed aboard the Nino Bixio were almost 3000 POWs captured in North Africa, including over 160 New Zealanders.
Two days out of Benghazi the convoy was attacked by the British submarine HMS Turbulent. The Nino Bixio was hit by two torpedoes: one exploded in the tightly-packed forward hold, killing an estimated 200 men and wounding another 60. In the panic and confusion many POWs jumped overboard. Some drowned immediately; others reached makeshift rafts and drifted around the Mediterranean for weeks without food or water. Those who survived the carnage onboard were hauled up on deck by rope and the injured treated by medical officers.
Despite extensive damage the Nino Bixio did not sink. The ship was towed by an escorting destroyer to Navarino in southern Greece, where the dead were removed and buried. The surviving POWs were transferred ashore, and those fit enough were shipped, via a short stay in Corinth, to Bari in Italy.
The Nino Bixio survived the war and visited several New Zealand ports during its post-war career. Its attacker did not fare so well: HMS Turbulent was lost with all hands off the coast of Sardinia in March 1943.
A total of 118 New Zealand prisoners of war died when the Italian transport ship Nino Bixio was torpedoed by a British submarine in the Mediterranean. Their deaths, combined with the 44 New Zealanders lost on the prisoner ship Jantzen in December 1941, accounted for nearly a third of New Zealand POW fatalities during the Second World War.
The Nino Bixio was hit while transporting Allied POWs from Libya to Italy. With another unmarked prison ship, the Sestriere, it had set sail from Benghazi for Brindisi on 16 August 1942, escorted by two destroyers and two torpedo boats. Crammed aboard the Nino Bixio were almost 3000 POWs captured in North Africa, including over 160 New Zealanders.
Two days out of Benghazi the convoy was attacked by the British submarine HMS Turbulent. The Nino Bixio was hit by two torpedoes: one exploded in the tightly-packed forward hold, killing an estimated 200 men and wounding another 60. In the panic and confusion many POWs jumped overboard. Some drowned immediately; others reached makeshift rafts and drifted around the Mediterranean for weeks without food or water. Those who survived the carnage onboard were hauled up on deck by rope and the injured treated by medical officers.
Despite extensive damage the Nino Bixio did not sink. The ship was towed by an escorting destroyer to Navarino in southern Greece, where the dead were removed and buried. The surviving POWs were transferred ashore, and those fit enough were shipped, via a short stay in Corinth, to Bari in Italy.
The Nino Bixio survived the war and visited several New Zealand ports during its post-war career. Its attacker did not fare so well: HMS Turbulent was lost with all hands off the coast of Sardinia in March 1943.