The  "Batang Kali massacre" occurred in a  village in central Selangor state  on Dec 12, 1948, when 14 members of  the Scots Guards are alleged to  have killed 24 unarmed ethnic Chinese  and set fire to their village on a  rubber plantation.         Photo: LEICESTER NEWS SERVICE
The about face comes three months after the  British Government turned down a    request from Malaysian activists to  investigate the killings, which took    place during an anti-communist  operation in the Malayan Emergency.  
  The "Batang Kali massacre" occurred in a village in central Selangor     state on Dec 12, 1948, when 14 members of the Scots Guards are alleged  to    have killed 24 unarmed ethnic Chinese and set fire to their  village on a    rubber plantation.
  "The  [British Government has] decided to reconsider the decision ... that     no inquiry would be established or other investigation undertaken into  the    incident at Batang Kali in 1948," said a letter from London that  was    sent to activists in Malaysia who have been campaigning for an  inquiry.  
  An official at the British High Commission in Kuala  Lumpur confirmed the    contents of the letter, but said there was no  guarantee an inquiry would be    ordered.  
  "We must not  pre-empt the outcome of the reconsideration process which we    expect  will take several weeks," she told the AFP news agency, adding    that  she could not say why the decision was being reviewed.  
  A  spokesman for the activists, who have been campaigning for an  investigation    since 1993, welcomed the decision and urged a speedy  resolution to the    issue.  
  "The British Government must act  quickly instead of simply dragging their    feet until the surviving  witnesses, who are very old, are no more,"    said Quek Ngee Meng,  adding that one of the witnesses died last week.  
  Mr Quek said  that his group had traced nine former British soldiers and four     Malaysians who were witnesses to the events but that this pool will  dwindle    if the legal process takes too long.  
  He said the  shooting was explained away in 1948 with the then Malayan attorney     general saying an inquiry had been held and the troops vindicated,  although    no trace of this investigation has been found.  
  The  massacre remained largely forgotten until a British newspaper in 1970  ran    an explosive account of the killings, publishing sworn affidavits  by several    soldiers involved who admitted the villagers were shot in  cold blood.  
  The revelations provoked uproar in Britain but a promised investigation was    later dropped after a change in government.  
   The guerrilla war left thousands dead and formally ended only in 1989  with the    signing of a peace treaty with the Malayan Communist Party.   
  Malaya won independence in 1957, when it became Malaysia.