CHINA / Regional

Normandy survivor gets top honour
By Xie Fang (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-07-06 05:56

HANGZHOU: Huang Tingxin, the only survivor of 24 Chinese naval officers who participated in the Normandy D-Day landings 62 years ago, received France's highest honour yesterday in recognition of his valour during World War II.

Huang Tingxin wearing the medal at yesterday's ceremony
Huang Tingxin wearing the medal at yesterday's ceremony.
Jean-Marin Schuh, French consul general in Shanghai, travelled to the veteran's home in Hangzhou, capital of East China's Zhejiang Province, to present him the award.

Huang, 88, suffers from a heart ailment and Parkinson's Disease.

A native of Anhui Province, Huang graduated from a naval school in Qingdao, Shandong Province, in the late 1930s. In 1942, during the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression (1937-45), Huang and 23 other naval officers were chosen by the then Nationalist government to study at the Britannia Royal Naval College in Greenwich, Britain.

They were then posted to fleets operating in different war theatres for internship in March 1944.

Huang served on escort carrier "Searcher" and his duty was to keep watch over the angle of the carrier on the sea and its position in the fleet formation.

"It was no small task as the smooth landing and take-off of aircraft depended on the tilt of the carrier," Huang recalled in earlier interviews.

At midnight on June 5, 1944 the eve of D-Day his warship slipped its moorings in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and sailed south; and it was not until the next morning that Huang and his peers heard on the BBC that the allied forces had landed at Normandy.

"Only then did we know what our mission was that night," Huang said. "All of us were overjoyed at the news, but we didn't feel completely relieved until our escort mission ended."
Page: 12