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Never quite a soldier: A Rhodesian Policeman's War 1971-1982
Was R195.00Now R136.50(eB 1365)
Delivery time: 24hr delivery in main centres: Order before 12h00 Monday - Friday, to receive the next working day Country: South AfricaFormat: Softcover
Publisher: Galago Publishing Pty LtdISBN: 9781919854212 Publication date: August 2006 Length: 242mm Width: 167mm Pages: 264
Never quite a soldier: A Rhodesian Policeman's War 1971-1982
Author: David Lemon
Was R195.00 Now R136.50
The author was a policeman during the Rhodesian bush war days. His first involvement came when ZANLA guerrillas moved into his police area and embarked on a murderous campaign targeting black and white civilians. The author was a policeman with Rhodesia ’s elite British South Africa Police during the Bush War days. His first involvement with the war came when he was member-in-charge of Macheke Police Station. Groups of infiltrating ZANLA guerrillas moved into the area and embarked on a murderous campaign targeting both black and white civilians.
The war throughout the country escalated and indiscriminate acts of terror like the bomb detonated in a Woolworths branch in Salisbury that killed 12 black shoppers and wounded 76 more, the June 1978 massacre by ZANLA of nine white missionaries and four children — one a three week old baby, the shooting down of a Viscount airliner and the subsequent massacre of survivors and countless other terrible incidents decided him to join the elite Police Support Unit which comprised 12 companies of fighting policemen, most of them black.
The Black Boots as they were known, were as smart or smarter than the Brigade of Guards on parade, and as fighting men they matched or surpassed any elite fighting unit anywhere in the world.
This is an amazing firsthand account of the Bush War.
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