Thursday, April 26, 2012

Tan Teck Guan Building

Video Clip Tan Teck Guan Building

Tan Teck Guan Building, located at 16A College Road, was built in 1911 to add to the existing facilities of the Straits and Federated Malay States Government Medical School (later known as King Edward VII College of Medicine). It underwent renovations in 1985 and was gazetted as a national monument on 2 December 2002.

History
The construction of Tan Teck Guan Building was funded by a $15,000 donation from Tan Chay Yan, a Chinese philanthropist in Malacca and one of the earliest rubber planters in British Malaya. The building was named after his father, who was the third son of Tan Tock Seng. It was officially opened on 23 June 1911 by then Acting Governor of the Straits Settlements, E. L. Brockman. It served as the medical school's administrative block and housed various offices, a library, a reading room, a lecture room and a pathology museum.

In 1926, when the building adjacent to it - today the College of Medicine Building - was built for the medical school, the Department of Anatomy took over Tan Teck Guan Building. In subsequent years, it also housed the electron microscope unit and the histology laboratory.

During World War II, the laboratory in the building was used by the Japanese to develop biological weapons.

Syonan (Singapore) HQ

Formed in 1942, by Ryoichi NaitoUnit 9420 had approximately 1,000 personnel based at the Raffles Medical University. The unit was commanded by Major General Kitagawa Masataka and supported by the Japanese Southern Army Headquarters.
There were two main sub units: the "Kono Unit", which specialized in malaria, and "Umeoka Unit", which dealt with the plague. In addition to disease experiments, this facility served as one of the main rat catching and processing centers.

The Oka 9420 Unit in Singapore

By Admin
by Chew Yong Jack
As a subordinate unit of the infamous Japanese biological warfare Unit 731, the Oka (岡inkanji or Steel) 9420 unit based in Singapore had been not much more than a mere footnote in history. In fact, in Daniel Barenblatt’s “Plague Upon Humanity” (Harper Collins, 2004), which got me acquainted to this little known factoid, it was merely mentioned that:
The [731] network ultimately included secret bases along the Russian border …. Singapore, the Philippines and New Guinea (p. 36).
and
[Ryoichi] Naito was himself a top university professor who had been director of the Unit 731 branch unit in Singapore, a civilian cohort of [Shiro] Ishii, with special expertise in the analysis of human blood (p. 47)
With the rather limited primary materials I had come by so far, I can make no claims of being able to shed much more light on the subject. However, a picture (incomplete and hazy as it doubtlessly is) can be pieced together of the inner-workings and operations of Oka 9420.
Origins
Ostensibly, Oka 9420 acted as a medical unit attached to the 25th Japanese Army occupation force in Singapore. Its first traceable contribution to the Japanese military administration in Singapore was in the inaugural Gunsei Geppou (軍政月報) issued in March 1942 which contained a section warning of the dangers of an outbreak of para-typhus in Singapore. It is quite likely that the public health warnings posted by the military administration in the Syonan Times under the – with hindsight of course – whimsically titled “M.A.D Notices” (M.A.D being the unfortunate acronym for “Military Administration Department”) also involved inputs from Oka 9420.
Oka 9420’s facilities were located in the Singapore General Hospital as well as the College of Medicine Building area along College Road. According to former Minister for Social Affairs Mr Othman Wok - who was a lab assistant tasked to remove fleas from rats, the bubonic plague laboratory was situated in the Tan Teck Guan building (Straits Times, 19/09/1991).
Command Structure
Oral accounts by those who worked for Oka 9420 offer at most a hazy conception of its structure. Mr Othman Wok, who had trapped rats for the unit’s laboratories, mentioned that he was under two colonels and four senior privates (ibid). Mr Chelliah Thurairajah Retnam, a local volunteer of the British Royal Army Medical Corp before working for Oka 9420’s “Analyst Department”, mentioned reporting to a “Major Nato” (National Archives, Accession No 579).
Assuming that Mr Retnam had not mistakenly referred to Oka 9420’s director Ryoichi Naito, a civilian researcher, as “Major Nato”, it was quite likely that military personnel had resided in the middle tiers of the command structure. Sandwiching this group would be director Naito at the top and local staff members like Mr Retnam and Mr Othman Wok at the base.
It is not clear how many locals were in Oka 9420’s employ. Mr Retnam recalled that in the “Analyst Department” that he had worked for, there were about fifty to sixty local staff members – including future luminaries such as Eddie Barker (former Minister of Law) and Phay Seng Whatt (former Chairman, Public Service Commission). There were also an unknown number of those who worked on a part-time basis for specific assignments like rat catching. Mr Othman Wok estimated that about forty were involved in trapping rats for the unit (Straits Times, 19/09/1991).
Known Activities
Mr Othman Wok’s experience in working with Oka 9420 was possibly the most revealing of the sinister nature of the unit’s work here in Singapore. Responsible for picking fleas from rats, he also witnessed how the fleas were fed blood of rats infected by plague, as he described below:
Each flea was then put in a test-tube, which was inverted over a rat’s stomach which had been shaved [sic] of its fur. The flea then fed on the rat, which had been injected with plague serum (ibid).
During my face-to-face interview with Mr Othman Wok on 7 March 2006, he revealed that the “research team” was careful to dispose of the carcasses of infected rats. He said that he had learned from a driver assigned to the unit that the fleas bred as vectors for plague were transported to Thailand. At the time, Mr Othman Wok was unaware of the purpose of his work and it was not until after the war when he read that the Japanese “had bombed Chongqing with bottles of fleas”* that he realised the implications of his work for Oka 9420 (ibid).
When I asked him what happened to Oka 9420’s facilities at Singapore General Hospital after the Japanese surrendered, Mr Othman Wok said he had heard that the unit destroyed all evidence of its existence even before the surrender.
In contrast to Mr Othman Wok’s experience, Mr Retnam’s work with the “Analyst Department” was apparently far removed from Oka 9420’s more sinister activities. His work with the unit only included malaria prevention while he was in Singapore and the supplying and ensuring the sanitation of water for his assignment in Kachanaburi, Thailand. Unit 9420 had the necessary water filtration equipment and expertise to supply water to the worksite at River Kwai.
From Mr Retnam’s description, Oka 9420’s work was thus nothing more than the prevention of water-borne diseases such as cholera and typhoid (National Archives, Accession No 579). The only experience common to both Mr Retnam and Mr Othman Wok was the physical abuse at the hands of rank-and-file Japanese soldiers who were typically high-handed and brusque in their treatment of locals.
However, it should be noted that the different experiences by both men actually illustrated themodus operandi of the Japanese biological warfare programme. After all, Ishii’s Unit 731 had as its official designation “Epidemic Prevention and Water Supply Unit of the Kwantung Army”. Ishii himself had also made his mark in the Japanese army through his invention of a portable water filtration device for usage in the field (Barenblatt, 2004).
A Question to Ponder
One big question left unanswered could be whether Oka 9420 had restricted its activities in Singapore to sample collection, research and breeding of fleas as vectors.
Could Oka 9420 have used the initial chaos during the Japanese invasion of Malaya and Singapore as an opportunity to conduct field testing as it had done in China (where attacks were known to have been conducted in Ningbo, Zhejiang and Jiangsu)? Could the public health warning for infectious diseases issued under the “M.A.D. Notices” in fact be caused by such sinister activities?
Given these unanswered questions, this short write-up is but no more than a tiny scratch on the surface of a topic which deserves further study by historians and history enthusiasts more resourceful than myself. While I harbour no expectations that my write-up could lead to further research by others, I do hope that it can play a small part in generating greater awareness and interest in Oka 9420.

In 1982, it was decided that the medical school would move to the Kent Ridge campus, and the Ministry of Health (MOH) proposed to restore and renovate the College of Medicine Building. In August 1985, the Preservation of Monuments Board recommended that Tan Teck Guan Building be preserved too. Both buildings were then renovated at a cost of S$14.4 million. When it was officially re-opened on 14 August 1987, Tan Teck Guan Building was occupied by MOH, the Academy of Medicine and the College of General Practitioners.

Description
An architect by the name of Draper designed the two-storey building with a Georgian façade and neo-classical details. Its main entrance has an ornate archway supported by Doric columns. The upper level of the building has Ionic columns.

It was originally made mainly from timber trusses, floors and joists that sat on brick. However, much of the timber was badly infested with termites by the time of the building’s renovation in 1985 and had to be replaced with steel structures. Similarly, the timber window frames were replaced with new matching wooden frames. The roof tiles were also replaced with matching new ones from France. While the building’s internal granite staircase and balustrade were retained, two brick walls were removed to allow for flexible office installation.

(In 1912 the medical school received a large donation $120,000 from the King Edward VII Memorial end started by Dr Lim Boon Keng)

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