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Monday, 05/09/2016 16:20

War photographer killed in battle honoured

Brave: War photojournalist Luong Nghia Dung on Highway 9 Front. — Photo courtesy of Luong Nghia Dung’s family
Viet Nam News

by Pham Hoang Anh

HA NOI — The American War in Viet Nam ended some forty years ago. For most Vietnamese people the war is a thing of the past, even for those who went through it. They do not want to talk about the war, the suffering and sacrifices they have made. However, most of them cannot help but recall those moments while looking at war photos.

Those powerful images, taken by war photojournalists amidst gun smoke and carnage on the battlefields — oftentimes paid for with the price of their own blood — hold the power to bring tears to the eyes of even the most seasoned warriors.

Luong Nghia Dung, born in Ha Dong town on the outskirts of Ha Noi, a veteran war photojournalist from the Vietnam News Agency (VNA) who fell just a few hours before the end of the battle for Quang Tri on May 1, 1972, is among this year’s nominees for Ho Chi Minh Award, the country’s highest honour in the fields of literature and arts.

Victory and defeat: Saigon-regime soldiers surrender at Height 365 in Quang Tri Province.

When American bombers carried out their campaign to bring North Viet Nam "back to the Stone Age" in 1965, Dung was a 31-year-old physics teacher and did not know much about how to use a camera. He took a short training course on photojournalism at the VNA with two other young teachers, Vu Tao and Hua Kiem. The three later formed the most prolific war photojournalist group of the American War. 

“He was a true war photojournalist,” said Hua Kiem, his longtime friend and colleague. “As war photojournalists, we all had to face death from time to time, but he was never afraid to throw himself in the midst of battle.”

Cheating death

Kiem recalled at least three times he and Dung escaped death within just 12 months while the duo was on a mission to cover some of the fiercest battles during the American war of destruction against North Viet Nam.

In 1967, Dung and Kiem were tasked with covering an artillery battle in Vinh Linh, Quang Binh Province. They were asked to be on stand-by near the frontline by the battery commander because it would be very dangerous to move around once the duel commenced with artillery pieces from both sides firing at each other’s positions.  

“We just started our lunch at the battery’s dining shelter, which was just a thatch-roofed trench 1.7m deep, 4m wide and 6m long, when the alarm sounded. There were two of us and the cook,” recalled Kiem. “Dung and I grabbed our cameras and rushed to the battle. That was when I felt an immense pressure from behind pinning me to the ground.

Reality of war: Vietnamese People’s Army soldiers exchange fire with enemies on Highway 9 Front.

“We were on the ground for a while as soil, rock and broken tree branches were falling over us. When we looked back, the shelter was gone. There was just a large crater instead. We couldn’t have gone more than 40m from it. The cook was killed immediately.”

Another close call was on National Route 1 when they were cycling back to Ha Noi after the assignment. The two photojournalists were starving for protein after months of a diet consisting only of dried food and vegetables. When they arrived at Quan Hanh Train Station in Nghi Loc, Nghe An Province, they spotted a lot of crows sitting idly on tree branches looking down at fish ponds that belonged to local villages. 

"We were given two K54 pistols for our protection, but we never used them for anything. I told Dung that this was as good a time as any to fire our first shots," Kiem laughed.

As they took aim at the birds, Kiem saw a black object getting bigger and bigger in the sky. He only had time to yell to Dung, "Lie down".

"I lost all sense of direction. The only thing I saw was a huge pile of bamboo trees. I thought to myself that had he been buried under those trees, it would take a platoon of local militias to retrieve his body," Kiem said.

Dung was fine. A bomb fell so close to the duo’s position that it uprooted the trees and tossed them right between the two. To their surprise, the road was covered with fish, and the birds were all over them. That day the two hungry war photojournalists treated themselves to a bountiful meal of fish. 

The train station was located right next to National Route 1, making it a perfect target for American bombers. Destroying the station and the road would effectively brake the North’s transportation network. Bombers who failed to strike other targets were ordered to dump everything on this bridge before returning to base.

"That’s why the crows sit there in waiting. They knew after the bombs, there was going to be a lot of fish. We only figured it out later," Kiem said.

“That was close, but perhaps the narrowest escape from death for Dung was at Phu Luong Bridge, Hai Duong Province,” Kiem said. “We all thought he died. Even the anti-air aircraft’s recon officer confirmed his death.”

Phu Luong Bridge was one of the key targets of American bombers during their bombing campaign in North Viet Nam. 

“Dung was standing on top of a chicken coop built with discarded ammo cases,” Kiem said. “It was sticking out like a sore thumb, but he chose that position because it offered a view of both the bridge and the anti-aircraft artillery unit charged with protecting it.

“A rocket hit the chicken coop. It was a direct hit. The unit’s recon officer saw Dung being blown away. He was sure nobody would survive that. That’s why he radioed in that the photojournalist was killed in action.”

Miraculously Dung survived without a scratch. When Kiem and his supervisor came back to the battleground to retrieve Dung’s body, they found him in a borrowed uniform eating rice with the soldiers.

“We couldn’t believe our eyes. Dung joked that he felt fine but a little bit hungry because the explosion sent him up too high in the air,” Kiem said. “We were all overwhelmed with joy that day.”

Charge!: People’s Army of Viet Nam soldiers jump over a trench during an attack with their bayonets ready for melee combat.

From one battle to another

Dung travelled tens of thousands of kilometres within a span of six years during his career as a war photojournalist. He was at some of the most heavily bombed sites in North Viet Nam, the infamously brutal 17th parallel that separated the country and even the foreign frontier of Savanakhet in Laos. His legacy consists of thousands of photos taken of battles, soldiers and ordinary people who rose up to fight and gave their lives for their country.

During these long years, it became a running joke at the VNA headquarters that any reports of Dung’s death should be discarded because he just simply wouldn’t yield to death.

But even Dung couldn’t cheat death forever. A few hours before the liberation of Quang Tri in 1972, he was killed while following a unit mounting a charge on the town.

“He died the same way he lived and worked through his whole life,” Kiem said. “I know Dung well. He wanted to be on the frontline, and it carries certain risks. He always knew that.”

Kiem saw his fair share of war and battles. After the death of his close friend and colleague, Kiem went on to join the soldiers who marched into Sai Gon, now Ho Chi Minh City, on that unforgettable day of April 30, 1975, and later joined war efforts against the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia. But even he had to admit that going to the frontline as often as his friend did was no easy decision. 

“Until this day I still don’t know how he did it,” Kiem said. “It is one thing to be constantly on the front line when you are young and without a family. It felt much heavier when you have children that you have to leave behind. Dung had four little ones and he never refused an assignment knowing that it could very well be the last time he would see them.”

For Dung, Kiem and others of their generation, the country’s freedom and independence were worth risking their lives and so much more for, much like a song Dung was often heard humming by his friends: “We will keep going to wherever the enemies are.” — VNS

Act fast: An artillery battery during an attack on Highway 9 Front.
Risky business: Soldiers from Sapper Company 6 push a delayed bomb into a nearby stream to clear the road.
Snapshot of battle: Return fire by the Women’s Ngu Thuy Artillery Company, Quang Binh Province. The company was established in 1967 and included 37 young women aged 16 to 22. During their service (1968-1972), the company, equipped with three 85mm artillery pieces, was reported to have sunk a total of five American warships. — Photos Luong Nghia Dung/VNA.
Haunting image: Artillery battery 13 during a battle at Doc Mieu Base in 1968. — Photos Luong Nghia Dung/VNA

 


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