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September 25, 2014

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Flying Tigers veteran, 91, critically ill

LONG Qiming, 91, the only Flying Tigers pilot on the Chinese mainland, is critically ill and being kept alive by a respirator at a hospital in southwest China’s Chongqing City.

Long, who speaks English and loves Mozart, was hospitalized in July with a serious lung infection at the No.1 Hospital affiliated with Chongqing University of Medical Science.

Long, born into a well-off Hong Kong family, joined the American Volunteer Group in 1943, who fought the Japanese during World War II as the Flying Tigers.

He flew the famous Camel Peak Aviation Route across the Himalayas — the so-called “death route” — delivering urgently needed military supplies to support China’s War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, and carried out bombing missions against the Japanese in Myanmar.

After being demobilized in 1952, Long worked as a technician, porter and English teacher in Chongqing.

Between December 1941 to September 1945, the Flying Tigers shot down 2,600 Japanese military planes, destroyed 44 warships and killed 66,700 Japanese soldiers.




 

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