

Song Playing is called "I Will
Remember You"
Name: Lloyd D. Oppel
Rank/Branch Civilian
Unit: Missionary, Christian Missions of Many Lands
Date of Birth: ca 1952
Home City of Record<: Port Albert, British
Columbia, Canada
Date of
Loss: 27 October
1972 Country of Loss: Laos Loss
Coordinates
: 162600N
1061200E (WD215175) Status (in
1973): Released POW
Category:
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground:
Ground
Other Personnel in
Incident:Evelyn Anderson; Beatrice Kosin (assassinated);
Samuel Mattix (released POW) Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project
15 October 1990 from one or more of the following: raw data
from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. REMARKS: 730328 RELSD BY PATHET
LAO
SYNOPSIS: In the late
hours of Saturday, October 27, 1972, a small group of North
Vietnamese soldiers invaded the southern Laotian town of
Kengkock, about thirty-five miles from Savannakhet. They took
prisoners, including Evelyn Anderson, Beatrice Kosin, Lloyd
Oppel and Samuel Mattix, all missionaries working for
Christian Missions of Many Lands. Several other Americans
managed to escape and radioed for help.
At 9:04 on
Sunday morning following the capture, an American helicopter
arrived and evacuated nine Filipinos, five Lao and the
Americans who had radioed for help. Less than an hour later,
Sgt. Gerry Wilson returned by helicopter to try and locate the
two American women. Lt.Colonel Norman Vaught immediately set
rescue plans into motion.
The American Embassy in
Vientiane heard of the rescue plan and ordered from the
highest level that no attempt be made to rescue the women. The
peace negotiations were ongoing and it was feared that a
rescue attempt would compromise the sustained level of
progress at the talks.
On November 2, 1972, a radio
message was intercepted which ordered that the two women be
executed. A captured North Vietnamese soldier later told U.S.
military intelligence that the women were captured, tied back
to back and their wrists wired around a house pillar. The
women remained in this position for five days. After receiving
orders to execute the two, the Communists simply set fire to
the house where they were being held and burned the women
alive. A later search of the smoldering ruins revealed the
corpse of Miss Anderson. Her wrist was severed, indicating the
struggle she made to free herself.
Oppel and Mattix,
the men who were captured with Anderson and Kosin, were held
captive and released in 1973. It is speculated that the women
would have been too much trouble to care for on the long trip
to Hanoi, and were killed instead. They were held in Hanoi
from December 6, 1972 until January 16, 1973 at which time
they were removed to a small country prison and interrogated
for three weeks. They were then moved back to Hanoi and
released on March 28. Contrary to some statements, the two
were not released by the Pathet Lao, but by the
Vietnamese.
Anderson and Kosin were not in Laos to
kill, but to help. Their deaths must be blamed not only on the
Communists who set the fire that killed them, but also on the
faceless, nameless Americans who decided they were expendable.
Here is where you will
learn all about my POW/MIA and why I am involved in this. Here
is what you can expect to find
here.
[ Lady
Care's Main Page ] [ POW
Main Page ] [ What
is a POW/MIA? ] [ Why
did I join the POW/MIA? ] [ Meet
My POW/MIA - Ian MacIntosh ] [ Meet
My POW/MIA - Lloyd Oppel ] [ The
POW/MIA Ring ] [ POW/MIA
Links ]

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