Australian High Commission
New Delhi
India, Bhutan

PA/25/14 AUSTRALIA AND INDIA: BOUND IN TIMES OF WAR

PA/25/14                                                                                                                                                 September 9, 2014


AUSTRALIA AND INDIA: BOUND TOGETHER BY TIMES OF WAR


Australia’s High Commissioner to India, Mr Patrick Suckling, says there has been growing interest in Australia and India’s shared military history following the visit to New Delhi last week by Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

The Prime Minister laid a wreath at India Gate to commemorate fallen soldiers, sailors and airmen from India and other allied nations who fought in World War I and subsequent conflicts.

“Australia and Indian soldiers fought together in both World Wars in several theatres, including at Gallipoli, Palestine, Italy, Singapore and Malaya,” Mr Suckling said.

“As the Prime Minister said when he was here, Australia is very conscious of these ties, which bind our two countries together. Australian and Indian soldiers were brothers in arms, fighting together in defence of freedom. It was appropriate that the Prime Minister paused to recognise this on his first official visit to India.”

On behalf of the Prime Ministers of Australia and New Zealand, Prime Minister Abbott extended an invitation to Prime Minister Narendra Modi to attend the commemoration of the 100-year anniversary of Gallipoli in 2015.

Nations with a close connection to the campaign will be invited to send high level representatives to the service.

According to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, by the end of the First World War in 1918, more than one million Indian personnel had served overseas.

Approximately 70,000 troops from the British Indian Empire gave their lives in the First World War, and over 9,200 decorations were earned, including 11 Victoria Crosses.

“There were over 15,000 Indians on Gallipoli and some 1,600 lost their lives,” Mr Suckling said.

“I believe there is growing recognition of this fact within India, and an increasing desire to honour those who gave their lives in service. I hope that Prime Minister Abbott’s visit to India contributes to this understanding and that our two countries continue to recognise how our contemporary relationship is shaped by our history of shared sacrifice.”