Daniel Roxo the Phantom of the Forrest Stephen Dunkley

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R350.00
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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Product code
B05
Bob Shop ID
614735798

Daniel Roxo the Phantom of the Forrest 

Author: Stephen Dunkley 

Publisher: Groep 7 Drukkers en uitgewers 

Edition: First 2017

ISBN: 978-0-620-75979-3 

Language: English  

Condition: Excellent. Clean copy with no markings and tight binding.  

Binding: Softcover     

Pages: Text with images and maps 

 

Francisco Daniel "Danny" Roxo (19331976) was a Portuguese hunter, safari guide, and soldier. Born in Mogadouro, he emigrated to Niassa Province, Portuguese Mozambique during the 1950s, where he established himself as a professional hunter.Roxo later fought in the Mozambican War of Independence against nationalist guerrillas.[2] After Mozambican independence he served as a foreign volunteer in 32 Battalion, a Portuguese-speaking unit of the South African Army.


Daniel Roxo was born in Mogadouro, Trás-os-Montes, on 1 February 1933.[3] As a young man he immigrated to Niassa Province in 1951, where he settled as a professional hunter and safari guide. When the Mozambican War of Independence broke out in 1964 Roxo formed his African trackers, servants, and European acquaintances into a private militia, hunting FRELIMO combatants for government bounties. 

Disillusioned by Portugal's promise to hand Mozambique to Samora Machel's incoming government, Roxo supported an abortive coup d'état by anti-FRELIMO forces in Lourenço Marques on September 7, 1974. He went into exile in South Africa the following November, joining the South African Defence Force. After completing Special Forces selection, Danny was seconded to Bravo Group (later 32 Battalion). 

Roxo was awarded the Honoris Crux for bravery during Operation Savannah for an action during the Battle of Bridge 14, an engagement during which he single-handedly killed eleven enemy soldiers. 

Bridge 14 was situated on the Nhia River, en route from Cela to Quibala. South African mechanized contingents deploying to the south had routed a unit of the People's Armed Forces for the Liberation of Angola (FAPLA) some time prior, and the retreating Angolans had demolished the existing structure. However, since Colonel Jan Breytenbach could not ascertain this from his forward positions, he ordered Roxo to conduct a more thorough reconnaissance. Roxo arrived at the river with four Eland-90 armoured cars; his patrol came under heavy mortar fire from an opposite bank and two of the vehicles withdrew, leaving Roxo's platoon to retire on foot. Having scouted the bridge alone and determined it was no longer intact, he inadvertently walked into an FAPLA ambush, but he managed to dispatch his attackers. Two escaped South African prisoners later claimed that aside from the Angolan casualties, four Cuban troops were reported killed in the encounter. 

During a patrol near the Okavango river, his personnel carrier struck a landmine and overturned, killing one man and crushing Roxo beneath it. The rest of the vehicle's crew tried to lift it free, but it was too heavy. Breytenbach wrote:

"Roxo, in keeping with his dauntless character, decided to make the best of things, lighting a cigarette and smoking it calmly until it was finished, then he died - still pinned beneath the Wolf. He had not complained once, nor uttered a single groan or moan, although the pain must have been excruciating."


 Mirage F1 |  South African Air Force | Willem Steenkamp's Border War | air power | Namibian bush war | Border War | SAAF | Dick Lord | Parabat | Recce | Border War |Koevoet | SAS | Rhodesia | Selous Scout | Paul Els | Peter Stiff |32 Battalion 



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