Philippines-Bataan Death March/Descendants

Descendants remember Bataan Death March as testimony to Japan’s World War II crimes

  • English
  • Français
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  • ID : 8477617
  • Dateline : Recent/File
  • Location : Philippines
  • Category : Other
  • Duration : 2'23
  • Audio Language : English/Part Mute
  • Source : China Global Television Network (CGTN)
  • Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
  • Published : 2026-05-03 16:22
  • Last Modified : 2026-05-03 20:43:30
  • Version : 2
  • ID : 8477617
  • Dateline : Récent/Archives
  • Location : Philippines
  • Category : Other
  • Duration : 2'23
  • Audio Language : Anglais/Partiellement muet
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
  • Restrictions : Pas d’accès dans la partie continentale de Chine
  • Published : 2026-05-03 20:20
  • Last Modified : 2026-05-03 20:43:30
  • Version : 2

Philippines-Bataan Death March/Descendants

Descendants remember Bataan Death March as testimony to Japan’s World War II crimes

Dateline : Recent/File

Location : Philippines

Duration : 2'23

  • English
  • Français


Bataan, Philippines - Recent (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of traffic
2. Various of Bataan World War II Museum
3. Various of exhibits featuring Bataan Death March
4. Photos of Colonel Ramon Zagala, Major General Rafael Zagala, both forced into Bataan Death March
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Major General Ramon Zagala, commander, 2nd Infantry Division, Philippine Army (starting with shot 4):
"He was sick. He had some fever. They didn't know if it was malaria or dysentery. My father just did not carry him, but he had his friends from the Ateneo ROTC. They were dragging my grandfather."

FILE: Bataan, Philippines - 1942 (Courtesy of Bataan World War II Museum - No access Chinese mainland)
6. Various of Bataan Death March

Bataan, Philippines - Recent (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Major General Ramon Zagala, commander, 2nd Infantry Division, Philippine Army (starting with shot 6):
"He was able to pick up a can of Wesson cooking oil. Then, he would give a teaspoon to his father, to himself, and to two other friends who helped carry him. For him, that made them survive, with very little rice, that one teaspoon."

FILE: Bataan, Philippines - 1942 (Courtesy of Bataan World War II Museum - No access Chinese mainland)
8. Photos about Bataan Death March

Bataan, Philippines - Recent (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Major General Ramon Zagala, commander, 2nd Infantry Division, Philippine Army:
"He used to say that they would dig graves for 50 men and they would bury 50 men at a time."
10. Various of visitors at Bataan World War II Museum
11. Various of newspaper report about American prisoner of war Corporal Nicholas Mergen being transferred from Philippines to Osaka
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Greg Mergen, son of Corporal Nicholas Mergen:
"(I'm) on the brink of tears to be honest. It isn't just him, it's all the greatest generation that are soon to be no longer on this earth. That's why the world needs to keep remembering."
13. Various of WWII-themed sculptures


The fall of Bataan Province in the Philippines in April 1942 marked one of the darkest chapters of World War II, when Japanese forces seized the peninsula and forced more than 70,000 Filipino and American soldiers on a brutal march.

The prisoners were driven over 100 kilometers to Camp O'Donnell, a former Philippine Army training ground turned into a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp notorious for overcrowding, disease, and starvation.

Among them were father and son Ramon and Rafael Zagala, compelled to walk over 100 kilometers in what became known as the Bataan Death March. Thousands perished along the way from hunger, thirst, exhaustion and disease.

Major General Ramon Zagala, Rafael Zagala's son and now commander of the Philippine Army's 2nd Infantry Division, recalled the courage and survival of his grandfather and father during the ordeal, a legacy that inspired him to join the military.

"He was sick. He had some fever. They didn't know if it was malaria or dysentery. My father just did not carry him, but he had his friends from the Ateneo ROTC. They were dragging my grandfather," he said.

They survived the march, but what awaited them at Camp O'Donnell was even deadlier. The prisoner of war camp was marked by severe overcrowding, disease, and starvation. Tens of thousands would die under brutal conditions. For the Zagala family, survival came down to a single, small measure.

"He was able to pick up a can of Wesson cooking oil. Then, he would give a teaspoon to his father, to himself, and to two other friends who helped carry him. For him, that made them survive, with very little rice, that one teaspoon," Ramon Zagala said.

Of the roughly 60,000 Filipino and American prisoners held there, an estimated 30,000 died from illness, starvation, and exhaustion.

"He used to say that they would dig graves for 50 men and they would bury 50 men at a time," said Ramon Zagala.

The memory of the march lives on inside the Bataan World War II Museum. Most visitors to the museum are Filipinos, though some foreign tourists also come. One of them is American national Greg Mergen. His father, Corporal Nicholas Mergen, fought in Bataan and became a prisoner of war, and was later held in Manila before being transferred to Osaka.

"(I'm) on the brink of tears to be honest. It isn't just him, it's all the greatest generation that are soon to be no longer on this earth. That's why the world needs to keep remembering," said Greg Mergen.

More than eight decades on, most of those who witnessed Bataan are now gone, and the story survives no longer in those who marched, but in those who choose not to forget.

This year marks the 80th anniversary of the opening of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, also known as the Tokyo Trials. The tribunal was convened on May 3, 1946, almost one year after Japan's unconditional surrender in the Second World War.

Over two and a half years, judges from 11 countries heard testimonies and examined war crimes and atrocities committed by Imperial Japan throughout Asia.

All 25 defendants were found guilty and seven of them, including notorious former Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, were sentenced to death by hanging.

ID : 8477617

Published : 2026-05-03 16:22

Last Modified : 2026-05-03 20:43:30

Source : China Global Television Network (CGTN)

Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland

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