Stupid and clueless fuckiens. They have forgotten the Jap occupation of Taiwan for 50 yrs and the 14,000 to 15,000 killed by them.
The term “Chinese communist terrorists” typically refers to members of the Malayan Communist Party (MCP), which was predominantly ethnic Chinese and fought to establish a communist insurgencies in both Malaya (later Malaysia) and Singapore during the mid-20th century. The two main periods are:
1. The Malayan Emergency (1948–1960) – the main armed insurgency against British colonial forces and later the independent Federation of Malaya.
2. The Second Malayan Emergency / Communist Insurgency War (1968–1989) – a lower-intensity revival after the MCP tried to re-establish itself.
Below is a factual list of major crimes and terrorist-style acts attributed to the MCP and its armed wing, the Malayan National Liberation Army (MNLA) / Malayan Peoples’ Anti-Japanese Army remnants, in Singapore and Malaysia. These acts were classified by the British, Malayan, Malaysian, and Singapore governments as terrorism or insurrectionary crimes.
In Malaysia (Malaya / Federation of Malaya / Malaysia)
• Assassination of British High Commissioner Sir Henry Gurney (6 Oct 1951, Fraser’s Hill) – ambushed and killed on the road.
• Multiple ambushes and massacres of police and military personnel (e.g., Bukit Kepong police station attack, 23 Feb 1950 – 25 killed).
• Murder of civilian plantation managers and miners, especially British and Chinese “running dogs” (collaborators); hundreds of European and Asian civilians were executed or assassinated between 1948–1960.
• Grenade and bomb attacks in towns (e.g., 1950s grenade attacks in Kuala Lumpur and Ipoh cinemas and markets).
• Assassination of the Perak Chief Minister Dato’ Abdul Razak’s secretary and other officials.
• Extortion and “tax” collection from villagers and businesses under threat of death; non-payers were often murdered.
• Kidnapping and forced recruitment of villagers into labor camps in the jungle.
• Derailment of trains and sabotage of infrastructure (bridges, railways, power lines).
• During the Second Emergency (1968–1989): renewed ambushes, especially along the Malaysia-Thailand border (e.g., 1975 attack on Kroh–Betong road; 1989 killing of civilians until the peace accord).
Official Malaysian government estimates: ≈ 10,000 total deaths during both emergencies (≈ 6,700 security forces and civilians in the First Emergency alone).
In Singapore
Singapore was part of Malaya until 1965 and was also under Emergency regulations from 1948. MCP-affiliated groups operated through front organizations and trade unions rather than large jungle bases.
Major incidents classified as communist terrorism in Singapore:
• Hock Lee Bus Riots (12 May 1955) – MCP-instigated riots that killed 4 people (including a U.S. journalist) and injured dozens; buses burned, police attacked.
• Multiple firebombings and grenade attacks in the 1950s–1960s (e.g., 1950s attacks on police stations and buses).
• Assassinations and attempted assassinations of police officers and anti-communist union leaders.
• The 1961–1963 wave of bombings: the MCP-linked Barisan Sosialis and trade unions carried out or inspired dozens of bombings, including the 1963 bombing of the Hong Lim election rally and numerous smaller explosive devices.
• MacDonald House bombing (10 March 1965) – carried out by two Indonesian marines during Konfrontasi, but Singapore authorities at the time also faced simultaneous communist sabotage attempts; however, the MCP itself did not claim this one. (Note: most sources attribute MacDonald House to Indonesia, not the MCP.)
• Extortion rackets and intimidation of Chinese businessmen and schools throughout the 1950s and early 1960s.
After Singapore’s independence in 1965 and especially after Operation Coldstore (1963) and subsequent arrests, the MCP’s urban network in Singapore was largely destroyed, and no significant communist terrorist acts occurred after the late 1960s.
Summary
The Malayan Communist Party and its armed wing were responsible for thousands of deaths and widespread terror, primarily in peninsular Malaysia, with a smaller but still deadly urban campaign in Singapore during the 1950s and early 1960s. Their tactics included assassination, bombings, ambushes, arson, and extortion. The insurgency formally ended with the Hat Yai Peace Accords in 1989.
If you need references or specific case details (court records, declassified British documents, etc.), let me know.