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N.Z. TROOPS

AT OLYMPUS PASS

HORDES OF GERMANS

USED REGARDLESS OF COST

(By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright.)

LONDON, April 17.

In spite of almost incessant attacks on the heights of Mount Olympus by wave after wave of German infantry, the British line forming the right flank of the Allied armies defending northern Greece is holding firm and inflicting enormous casualties on the German hordes, which are being flung into the fray regardless of the cost. Olympus Pass itself is held by New.Zealanders. Hitherto, the enemy has failed even to dent the main British front, but the German advances on the left flank, south of the Monastir gap, may entail a rectification of the line. An Officer of a famous British mechanised regiment declared that not a single British tank was put out of | action by gunfire, whereas the British shells went through the German tanks like cheese. He added: "But numerically they have the upper hand, and they are advancing In swarms, with motor-cycle forces and infantry in support." Backing up the enormous German land army is a powerful air fleet; they fly over in batches of 20, and sometimes 40, unload their bombs, and then return for more. The fiercest fighting has occurred at the entrance of the Sarandaporan Pass, where the Australians are inflicting heavy losses. .While attempting to thrust to the plains of Thessaly (Trikkala area) through the Sarandaporan Valley, the Germans to the east are trying to avoid attacking Mount Olympus by applying pressure on the coast road and the railway running down the Gulf of Salonika to Larissa. German tanks are apparently making repeated thrusts in the region of Katerini (north-east Of Mount Olympus), so far without result. "CATCHING HELL" FROM THE / ; ■■■■■■•• •'■ R.A.F. An observer said that German planes are strafing the roads, but are "catching hell" from the Royal Air Force. One British armoured unit has brought down five dive-bombers with its Bren guns. An Athens correspondent estimates that the Germans are using at least 10

are attempting to crash through regardless of the cost, with the support of hundreds of dive-bombers and Mes■serschmitts. These mass attacks are believed to have cost the Germans two divisions of casualties in. two days. The Athens correspondent of "The Times" describes the enemy tank activity in*" the tremendous battle north of the Larissa plain. After long periods of silence along the mountain front, he states, German tanks appear, first of all fast double-enders, which go as quickly in reverse as ahead, and then heavy units, generally of 35 tons. Our men wait till the tanks are close up, and then their anti-tank guns and rifles open fire at a range at which the thickest armour can be penetrated. SOUP AS WEAPON. A New Zealander described how he awaited such an attack. "A tank with its hatches open came right up under a bluff where we were cooking soup," he said. "The crew fired, and one of us emptied the scalding contents of crur cauldron into the open tank." These enemy' attacks are usually in I the nature of reconnaissance, and are ! rarely persisted in when it is discovj ered that a position is strongly held. The Allied forces in the last few days have beaten off scores of such attacks, but still the tanks come on, seeking weak spots. The correspondent adds that many small groups of Yugoslav troops are in the forefront of the fight against the Germans.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19410419.2.56.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 92, 19 April 1941, Page 9

Word Count
570

N.Z. TROOPS Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 92, 19 April 1941, Page 9

N.Z. TROOPS Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 92, 19 April 1941, Page 9

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