Threatened With Death!
Heroes Remember
Transcript
I had one personal experience where I was threatened with death
and it occurred when a Greek Cypriot platoon commander decided
that he would send some of his people into no man’s land to pick
up some oil drums – empty oil drums that were there. That would
have been a violation of the status quo. See he intended to
use them to fortify his location. I sent a couple of people from
my observation post to stop the crew from taking the oil drums
and they got into sort of a pushing and shoving match over these
oil drums. I went up the hill to talk to the platoon commander.
He had deployed slightly to the left of them.
I remember a person with a machine gun and he said to me,
“Take your people off mine on the oil drums there and give me the
oil drums or I will order my men to shoot you”. So I couldn’t do
that nor could I go away so I sort of prepared myself to be
shot and fortunately my company commander who’d been advised by
radio of the circumstances developing rushed up behind me
and deployed a few cooks and whoever he could find from the
company headquarters with rifles aimed at the Cypriot platoon
commander. So hence the stand off. I was allowed to go down and
they didn’t take the oil drums and the situation went back to
where it had been, but for me it was pretty traumatic.
The second experience was not mine but I was in the battalion
command post. We received a message from one side or the
other saying that a shepherd and his sheep had crossed the
boundary and if they weren’t removed in some impossible time
like fifteen minutes, this side would open fire. We immediately
dispatched a reconnaissance patrol to try to deal with the
situation but they couldn’t make it in fifteen minutes. It was
quite far away and difficult terrain and so when they got
there the shepherd and his sheep were dead – killed by a fifty
calibre machine gun from a couple of thousand yards. So this was
just a demonstration I suppose. That’s ... that’s what we saw I
guess. I didn’t see that but ...
Interviewer: That lack of value of human life that they
exhibited that day ... now granted you were okay but you were
with your command post who’d heard about this ... that must
stick with you even today?
Yes. That ... that experience is often with me. I’ve told that
story a lot of times. I guess I’ve told it as an example of the
situation that was ... along with an opinion that we may not have
been ... did not achieve much by our presence actually.
Description
Mr. Paterson talks about his life being threatened after sending troops in to no man’s land to pick up oil drums.
Tom Paterson
Mr. Paterson was born in Vancouver BC in 1943. At the age of six his family moved to Toronto, Ontario where he graduated from high school. After graduating from high school he went to the University of Ottawa to obtain his degree. Mr. Paterson joined the service in 1964 where he became a major and did peace keeping in Cyprus.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 3:56
- Person Interviewed:
- Tom Paterson
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Canadian Armed Forces
- Location/Theatre:
- Cyprus
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Infantry
- Rank:
- Major
- Occupation:
- Infantry Officer
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