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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
National

World War II tunnel found in Kanchanaburi

Researcher Srawut Saisungsiripong stands inside a tunnel built during World War II that he and his colleague discovered in Kanchanaburi's Sangkhla Buri district earlier this week. (Photo: Piyarach Chongcharoen)

A 35 metre-long man-made escape tunnel built during the Second World War has been discovered in Kanchanaburi.

The tunnel was discovered about 100 metres from Highway 323 (Sangkhla Buri - Three Pagoda Pass) earlier this week by Marnchai Wattanakaran and Srawut Saisungsiripong, local researchers of the Death Railway in the Sangkhla Buri area.

Mr Srawut said the tunnel, which is 2 metres wide and about 1.8-1.9 metres high, was carved through a hill for a distance of about 35 metres. The tunnel ends in a forest.    

"It was built by prisoners of war during WW II as we found traces of pickaxes, crowbars and hoes used as digging tools," Mr Srawut said. "The tunnel's interiors are still in relatively good condition. Only soil at the tunnel's mouths collapsed."

He believes the tunnel was used to hide from airstrikes when Japanese troops were building a railway track to the Three Pagodas Pass border crossing into Myanmar.

The researchers asked agencies to further explore the tunnel and develop it into an educational and tourism venue.

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