A war of history in which 600 Japanese soldiers were eaten brutely by the dreaded crocodiles. Actually, this incident took place in 1945 during the Second World War, when British troops made a sudden attack on a group of Japanese soldiers. As a result, Japanese soldiers tried to leave the site immediately for avoiding this deadly situation and decided to flee through the mangrove forest of Ramree Island. About a thousand soldiers were running together and blood was also dripping down from their bodies.
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Meanwhile, in the middle of the forest, they saw a small river, through which they thought it was right to run across. That river was about 16 kilometers long, everything seemed fine, but they had no idea that this river was full of dreaded crocodiles. Many crocodiles in the river weighed around 1 ton and were 20 feet in length. During this time the Japanese soldiers were stuck with two types of predators: the British army on one side and the deadly saltwater crocodiles on the other. But as soon as the soldiers entered the river, attracted by the smell of blood dripping from their bodies, crocodiles started attacking them.
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But during their violent confrontation with the crocodiles, the soldiers also made several attempts to harm the crocodiles in return and tried to cross the river quickly, but the crocodiles were many in number, so no soldier could stand in front of them for long. So by the time the river was crossed, only 400 out of 1,000 soldiers had survived, as 600 had been devoured brutally by the crocodiles. The whole incident was so painful that 24 percent of the water in that river was covered in blood, making it one of the deadliest battles the Japanese soldiers had ever fought.
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