Balalae Island

Balalae Island
Balalae Island
Location in the Solomon Islands
Coordinates: 006°59′20″S 155°52′53″E / 6.98889°S 155.88139°E / -6.98889; 155.88139
Country Solomon Islands
Province Western Province
Island group Shortland Islands Group

Balalae Island (or Ballale/Ballali) is an island of the Shortland Islands Group in the Western Province of the Solomon Islands.[1]

Early history

Ballale means border place in the local Alu language. As long as the natives of the Shortland Islands can remember, the island was uninhabited. According to a local legend, a strange blue light was often observed over the island. Therefore, the island was avoided, and, traditionally, no one lived there. For the local people, Ballale Island was considered a haunted place (sacu-sacu). War groups from neighboring Buka Island used this uninhabited island to cannibalize their prisoners captured during sucessfull tribal feuds and headhunting raids to Choiseul Island.[2]

Englishman Sam Atkinson purchased the island in 1901 and established a coconut plantation, harvesting copra. The plantation included the Atkinson family home, as well as copra drying sheds and living quarters for workers. Copra was exported by boat. When Sam Atkinson died in 1931, his wife Edith kept on managing the plantation. She remained on the island until early 1942 when the British colonial government ordered all Europeans to be evacuated from the Solomons Islands.

World War II

The island was the scene of a Japanese war crime during the Second World War. A work party of 517 British prisoners of war from various artillery regiments captured after the Battle of Singapore were transported to the island under the command of Lt. Col. John Bassett to build an airfield. When the airfield was completed the prisoners, including their commander Bassett, were executed. The mass graves were discovered after the war. Japanese authorities claimed that the prisoners were lost at sea when their transport was torpedoed.[3]

This base was the intended destination from Rabaul of Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto when his inspection flight was intercepted and shot down on April 18, 1943, near the later site of Buin, Bougainville Island, killing him.

Sale of relics

Location of Balalae Island, Shortland Islands, south of Bougainville

In 2007, the Solomon Islands Government agreed to the arrangement for the sale of all World War II relics at the community of Balalae in Shortlands to an international group. The agreement gave way for removal of 11 remains of Japanese planes that had been in place since World War II.[4]

Sources

  1. "Shortland Islands". Solomon Islands Historical Encyclopaedia 1893-1978. Retrieved 4 August 2018.
  2. "Ballale Island (Ballalae, Ballalai) Western Province Solomon Islands". Pacific Wrecks. Retrieved 4 August 2018.
  3. "Roll of Honour". Retrieved 2009-09-18.
  4. Joanna, Sireheti (2007-11-21). "Removal of WWII Relics in Solomons". Solomon Times. Retrieved 2012-10-19.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.