Jack Wong SUE OAM, DCM

SUE, Jack Wong

Service Number: 83783
Enlisted: 25 September 1943
Last Rank: Sergeant
Last Unit: Z Special Unit
Born: Perth, Western Australia , 12 September 1925
Home Town: Perth, Western Australia
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Merchant Seaman
Died: Natural , Perth, Western Australia , 16 November 2009, aged 84 years
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials:
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World War 2 Service

25 Sep 1943: Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Leading Aircraftman, 83783
1 Dec 1944: Promoted Royal Australian Air Force, Sergeant, Z Special Unit
31 May 1945: Involvement Royal Australian Air Force, Sergeant, 83783, Z Special Unit, Malaya/Singapore
21 Jan 1946: Discharged Royal Australian Air Force, Sergeant, 83783
25 May 1946: Honoured Distinguished Conduct Medal, Malaya/Singapore

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Biography contributed by Graham Padget

Sergeant Jack Wong Sue was the son of Jack Wong Sue and May Magdalene Wong Sue of Perth Western Australia.
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Vale Jack Sue,
A quiet hero and a brave man of action
There are times when a man’s heroics are of such magnitude that they logically belong in the world of fiction. Jack Wong Sue’s wartime deeds fall into such a category But they were fact.

Mr Sue, who died yesterday,(16th November) aged 84, was reluctant to talk much about his own efforts, but his actions speak for themselves. Sent behind enemy lines during WWII with the Z Special Unit of the Services Reconnaissance Department, agent AKR 13’s team of seven agents was charged with getting information on Japanese troop movements as a prelude to the Australian invasion of Borneo.

Borneo was occupied by 37,000 troops of the Japanese Imperial Army and so those sent from Fremantle in 1944 aboard the USS Tuna on operation Agas 1 were issued with “L-táblets”, lethal capsules which would bring death in 30 seconds. They were to be swallowed if captured to avoid interrogation and torture.

The unit trained Chinese and Malay guerilla fighters and harassed the Japanese, killing many. They gathered information for Operation Kingfisher, the plan to rescue the Australian and British prisoners of war at the infamous Sandakan camp.

Mr Sue had to reconnoitre the camp and the landscape and the images of the emaciated Australian soldiers remained with him. The rescue plan was later cancelled.

In June 1945, in desperate need of intelligence, Mr Sue. dressed as a Chinese coolie, walked into a railway station which was crawling with Japanese troops. He found the Japanese-appointed Chinese station master, spoke to him in Chinese, made threats and walked out with vital intelligence. The act won him the Distinguished Conduct Medal.

But, feeling ashamed by his threats, he searched for years after the war for the station master. In the late 1990s, Mr Sue found the man’s family and apologised to them for what he had said.

He was born in Perth in 1925. His father was a Chinese doctor. Schooled at Perth Boys School, Mr Sue, a sea scout, would ferry in US crews from their Catalina flying boats as the war loomed. At 14 he played piano for the troops at the City Hotel.

Sent a white feather at the age of 16, he put his age up and joined the Norwegian merchant navy He then tried to join the Royal Australian Navy, but was refused because of his Chinese parentage.

After the war Mr Sue remained tied to the ocean, starting Jack Sue WA Skindivers in 1951, and was a key figure in the world of scuba diving for decades. Mr Sue was awarded an Order of Australia Medal in the General Division in 2006.

He had three wives and seven children.
Mr Sue’s son Barry said yesterday his father had no idea of fear “He was not one to brag about himself, he was very humble,” Barry Sue said. “He’s lived the life of 10 men.” Ray Krakouer, 87, a friend of Mr Sue’s for 50 years, summed up his mate simply: “He was a good Australian. There was no better Australian than Jack Sue. He was fair dinkum.”

(Extracted & edited from RAAF Radschool Association Magazine – Vol 30 & The West Australian on the 17th November and was written by Malcolm Quekett.)

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