A photo from open sources
On the island of Borneo, on the road along which during the Second World War Japanese drove 2,400 thousand English and Australian prisoners of war captured frightening transparent silhouettes similar to walking people.
A photo from open sources
Of those soldiers who were dying en route from starvation and beatings or were killed by bayonets of escorts, by the end of the war were able to live out everything six persons. Therefore, this road was called the Death Road. The photograph was taken by retired Major John Tulloch, who studied this period of history and specially arrived in Borneo, to take pictures of those scary places. When John began in detail consider new pictures, then on one of them, to my horror, spotted silhouettes of walking skeletons or exhausted exhausted people.
A photo from open sources
Photo from the Death Road from 1945
70 years ago on this road for a month exhausted and barefoot the British and Australians were driven through the jungle, torturing and scoring to death, so that they would not be liberated by the advancing American troops. Only six managed to survive, and then because they managed to escape. This Japanese crime is considered the worst crime against Australian soldiers during the Second World War.
A photo from open sources
Amazed Talloch looked at the photo for a long time and in the end decided that it just displayed a reflection of a white towel lying on dashboard. He showed photos to other people and they called him strange and intimidating, the ghostly silhouettes in the picture are painfully similar on the figures of people. Even if this is really just a reflection of the towel, in connection with the eerie history of the Road of Death is not much for many I believe it.
Australia War