Fromelles Diggers to receive individual
burial
Thursday - 31 July 2008
- MINSCIENCEANDPERSONNEL101/08
Minister for Defence Science and
Personnel, the Hon Warren Snowdon MP,
today announced that the Australian and
British Governments will seek to have
the remains of their World War I
soldiers – buried in mass graves near
Fromelles in 1916 – exhumed and given
individual burials with military
honours.
Mr Snowdon today made the joint
announcement with Mr Derek Twigg,
British Under-Secretary of State for
Defence and Minister for Veterans. It
follows the limited excavation of the
Pheasant Wood site in May this year,
when the Glasgow University
Archaeological Research Division (GUARD)
confirmed that human remains were
present and assessed their condition,
number and nationality.
“The Australian and British Governments
have agreed that individual military
burial is the most fitting way to
commemorate our brave soldiers, and will
ensure the heroism they showed in the
terrible battle of Fromelles will be
remembered and revered,” said Mr
Snowdon.
“Should these remains have been
discovered by post-war battlefield
clearance teams in 1919, the war dead
would have been re-interred with
individual headstones; our men are no
less deserving of that honour and
dignity today.”
Planning work will begin immediately,
and subject to the approval of French
authorities and with the support of the
people of Fromelles, a timeframe for the
recovery of remains will be announced
later this year. Future work, including
the significant task of preparing a war
cemetery, will be undertaken under the
auspices of Commonwealth War Graves
Commission.
“Whilst acquisition of the land near
Pheasant Wood for a permanent war
cemetery is a Commonwealth War Graves
Commission responsibility, we
acknowledge the generous offer of land
by the owner of the mass burial site,
Madame Demassiet, and will consider the
needs of all parties including the
tenant farmer in this process.”
Work is underway to confirm the names of
those believed buried at the Pheasant
Wood site, and the Australian and
British Governments have agreed to
equally share the costs of research,
exhumation and reburial.
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