Monday, July 20, 2015

ASIAN NEWS BEAT:Volcanic eruption,President Sukarno's overthrow, Jolly Green Giants

Postcard  view of  very peaceful looking  Nakom  Phanom,Thailand,above, prompts author  Ian Mackay , a  Magnetic Island resident, to  recall  hectic life  covering  major events .

I first went to Thailand in 1962 when I was working for Channel  7 in Adelaide to make a film about SEATO,the South East Asia Treaty  Organisation ,of which Australia was a member and which had its HQ in Bangkok. Cameraman Brian Taylor and I travelled a fair bit around the place including trips to Mukdahan and Nakom Phanom, both on the Mekong, and each with large air bases.  

In 1965 Taylor and I left Channel 7 to become a freelance news crew in SE Asia. We were employed by ITN London to help set up its new Far East Bureau in Singapore, and to work with its reporter Gerald Seymour throughout the region, nominally from India to Japan and wherever else events might take us.
 
When we were in the Philippines covering the September 1965 eruption of the Taal volcano we heard of the military coup in Indonesia in which President  Sukarno was overthrown by the generals. It was pretty big news, but from bitter experience ITN knew Seymour couldn’t get into Djakarta because of his British passport. Taylor and I, however, were Aussies, so London told us to get in there, virtually at any cost. 
 
We went to the Indonesian  embassy in Manila where a bloke told us we could get visas, but it would cost 20,000 quid. London didn’t blink, and the money turned up next day in the Chartered Bank. However, I refused to part with the dough until the visa stamps were in our passports, by which time the Indonesian Ambassador admitted he didn’t have a clue what was happening in Djakers and that it would be better if we applied to the Indonesian  Embassy in Bangkok. 
 
Taylor and I cooled our heels (if nothing else) in Bangkers for about a week before we made a few trips around the place in desperate search of a story which might justify the enormous amount of expenses we were running through and we found ourselves back in Nakom Phanom. The base we had seen three years before had grown dramatically, and was now the home of a flight of the giant Sikorsky HH-3E helicopters known as Jolly Green Giants which were being used to fly across the Laos panhandle to rescue pilots who had been shot down over North Vietnam.The Thai Government maintained that there were no US bases on its soil, but our film told a different story of course.The long and the short of it was that we never got into Djakarta, but had a good time trying.
 
*The postcard  was  given  to  Little Darwin along with  two naturally dyed , hand  woven  rugs from Uban Ratchatani, Thailand , birthday presents from  two great friends.