Showing posts with label John Dewhirst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Dewhirst. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2009

Sister of Khmer Rouge murder victim John Dewhirst hopes for UN trial

Sep 20 2009
By Coreena Ford
Sunday Sun (UK)


KHMER Rouge murder victim John Dewhirst’s sister has revealed how she hopes good can come from his killer’s trial.

John was the only Briton among 17,000 to die after being captured during the communist Khmer Rouge’s rule over Cambodia in the 1970s.

Now, 31 years after his death, his murderer, Kaing Guek Eav, known as Comrade Duch, is being tried by a UN-backed tribunal on genocide charges.

He has already confessed to John’s murder and invited victims of the regime to visit him.

But John’s sister Hilary Holland, 53, a solicitor from Brampton, Cumbria, has refused to attend and says she has not even been able to bring herself to utter John’s name in more than 30 years.

An aspiring novelist, John left home after finishing his A-levels to explore and bought a one-way ticket to Tokyo, where he got a teaching post and a part-time job on a newspaper.

He quit in 1978, aged 26, after deciding to join pals on travels around the Gulf of Thailand in their boat The Foxy Lady.

But when they drifted into Cambodian waters, a Khmer Rouge military launch swooped.

Stuart Glass was shot dead instantly and the other two were taken to the S21 torture centre – a former school – where, after enduring a catalogue of horrors, they were forced to sign confessions they were CIA agents.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

The Englishman butchered in Cambodia's killing fields: The terrifying tale of the British tourist who blundered into horror of Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge

Butchered: Briton John Dewhirst suffered a violent death in a Khmer Rouge death camp in Cambodia in 1978
Building "A" of Tuol Sleng prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was reserved for the interrogation of important prisoners of the Khmer Rouge. Its almost certain that this is where John Dewhirst would have been held and interrogated
Held captive: John Dewhirst photographed on arrival at Tuol Sleng in 1978
On trial: A verdict on chief Khmer Rouge jailer Kaing Guek Eav, also know as "Duch", is expected in early 2010. He is charegd with crimes against humanity
Genocide: Cambodian men pray as a skull map is dismantled at a genocide museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia in March 2002
Everlasting grief: John's sister Hilary says the death of her brother has left her feeling constant pain

09th September 2009
By Andrew Malone
Daily Mail (UK)


At an old school building in Cambodia, the startled face of John Dewhirst stares down from the wall.

A teacher from Newcastle, Dewhirst is the only British citizen with his official photograph on display.

It's a distinction his sister, Hilary, will curse until the day she dies.

Clean-shaven, his long hair neat for the cameras, Dewhirst's portrait is one of thousands pinned around the building.

They were taken by the perpetrators of one of the darkest episodes in the history of the human race.

Between 1975 and 1979, the school was renamed Tuol Sleng - Hill Of The Poisonous Trees.

The sound of children playing and laughing was replaced by screams for mercy as horror stalked the classrooms and corridors.

The communist Khmer Rouge had seized control of Cambodia and transformed the school into a 're- education centre' to hold enemies of 'agrarian socialism' (a return to the Stone Age with peasants working by hand in the fields, and all modern aspects of life outlawed).

Pol Pot, the French-educated Khmer Rouge leader, decreed a new Cambodian calendar to start again at Year Zero - a true beginning of the world in which all should live as they did at the dawn of time.

Pot, who styled himself Brother Number One, ordered that the entire population should live off the land, with no medicine and starvation rations.

Dissidents were eliminated. 'To keep you is no benefit - to destroy you no loss,' was his favoured mantra.

After driving the entire Cambodian population out of towns and cities, the Khmer Rouge separated those who could read, write or wore glasses - anyone, in fact, who betrayed signs of being educated.

They were taken to Tuol Sleng, where the classrooms were modified in anticipation of their arrival.

Desks and chairs were removed and replaced with iron bed frames, manacles and instruments of torture.

In a chilling echo of the Nazi death camps, rooms were set aside for 'medical experiments'.

With the borders sealed, inmates were sliced open and had organs removed with no anaesthetic.

Some were drowned in tanks of water. Others were attached to intravenous pumps and every drop of blood was drained from their bodies to see how long they could survive.

Electric shocks to the genitals were routine. The most difficult prisoners were skinned alive.

Babies were held by the feet and swung headfirst against walls, smashing their skulls.

Other inmates of Tuol Sleng, also known as S-21, were taken to an infamous place that later became known as the Killing Fields, a beautiful orchard just a few miles away on the outskirts of the capital city, Phnom Penh.

There, prisoners were ordered to dig their own graves. Then, to save on bullets, they were bludgeoned to death with iron bars and chunks of wood.

Up to 17,000 perished in Tuol Sleng; across Cambodia, almost two million - a quarter of the population - died. Brother Number One brushed aside his blood-lust, saying: 'He who protests is an enemy, he who opposes is a corpse.'

So how did a Briton, on a sailing trip around the Far East with friends, become caught up in this horror?

Only now can the full, awful truth about what really happened to John Dewhirst and his companions finally be told.

Like much that took place during the years of Cambodia's genocide, there is no happy ending to the story of the Geordie captured by Pol Pot. Indeed, his fate may have been even worse than his friends and family feared at the time.

Recently, at the historic trial of the camp commandant, Kaing Guek Eav, disturbing testimony emerged that the 26-year-old and his companions were not executed swiftly, as previously thought.

The special UN court in Cambodia heard harrowing claims that the Western sailors were taken outside and burned alive in the streets of the capital, having first endured months of torture and being forced to sign lengthy confessions about their true identities as American spies.

Cheam Soeu, 52, a guard at Tuol Sleng, told how he saw fellow Khmer Rouge torturers lead one of the foreign men out on the street at night and force him to sit on the ground.

A car tyre was put over him and set alight. 'I saw the charred torso and black burned legs [afterwards],' he said.

Pol Pot had personally given instructions that all evidence of the existence of Dewhirst and his friends was to be destroyed.

In a message to his 'fellow brothers' in the Khmer Rouge, their leader stated: 'It's better to kill an innocent by mistake than spare an enemy by mistake.'

Kaing Guek Eav, a former teacher, was in charge of Tuol Sleng. Also known as Duch, he is one of five former Khmer Rouge leaders to be tried for crimes against humanity.

A cold-blooded killer, Duch used to 'mark' the confessions of his prisoners, sending the papers back to the cells with notes in the margins suggesting improvements to grammar and sentence structure.

Every prisoner was forced to pose for photographs soon after capture.

The Khmer Rouge leadership was determined to keep an accurate record of all the 'enemies of the revolution' - and even took photos of some of their victims being tortured.

They included people caught speaking a foreign language, scavenging for food or crying for dead loved ones.

Some Khmer Rouge loyalists were killed for failing to find enough 'counter-revolutionaries' to execute.

Duch was a trusted confidant of Pol Pot, and has confirmed that the Westerners were doomed from the moment they were seized and taken to Tuol Sleng.

'I received an order from my superiors that the Westerners had to be smashed and burned to ashes,' he told the court. 'It was an absolute order from my superiors.'

This is confirmed by secret Khmer Rouge documents. 'Every prisoner who arrived at S-21 was destined for execution.

The policy at S-21 was that no prisoner could be released. Prisoners brought to S-21 by mistake were executed in order to ensure secrecy and security.'

Until the awful events of 1978, John Dewhirst had led an idyllic existence. Born in Newcastle, the family moved to Cumbria when John was 11.

A sports enthusiast and climber, he relished outdoor life and spent his boyhood roaming the Cumbrian countryside. He was keen on shooting, fishing and canoeing - yet his older sister, Hilary, says he had a sensitive side, too.

As he grew older, John developed a love of literature; he wrote poems and hoped to become a novelist.

After finishing his A-levels, and much to the pride of his father, a retired headmaster and his mother, who ran an antiques shop, John won a place to study English at Loughborough University.

After finishing his degree and his teacher training, he decided to explore the world - buying a one-way ticket to Tokyo, where he planned to work for a year teaching English, earning enough money to travel back overland to the UK.

A popular, laid-back individual, John became good friends with other young westerners in Tokyo.

New Zealander Kerry Hamill and Stuart Glass, a Canadian, were part of his circle of friends and the pair owned an old motorised junk called Foxy Lady.

Seeking adventure, John quit his teaching post, along with his part-time job on the Japan Times newspaper, and joined Hamill and Glass on a trip sailing round the warm waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

They planned to sell Foxy Lady in Singapore and travel on overland. Days were spent fishing and sunbathing, between steering the boat to its next destination.

Nights were spent eating fish, drinking beer and looking at the stars.

He kept in touch regularly with Hilary, writing her letters once a month.

'He was very happy and very interested in what he was experiencing of a new and different part of the world,' she says.

Then, in early 1978, disaster struck. The Foxy Lady drifted into Cambodian waters. A Khmer Rouge military launch steamed towards them.

Stuart Glass, the skipper, was shot dead immediately. Dewhirst and Hamill were seized and taken by military truck to Phnom Penh.

At the time, the full scale of the horror inside Cambodia had yet to reach the outside world.

Hilary heard that her brother had been captured only after a telephone call from the Foreign Office.

A charming and pleasant young man, she still thought John might be able to talk his way to freedom.

It was not to be. Duch, the camp commander, was determined to follow his orders to the letter. He instructed his Khmer Rouge underlings to get to work. The torture lasted a month.

John Dewhirst and Kerry Hamill endured unimaginable terror. Both wrote lengthy 'confessions'.

Under duress, the Englishman admitted that he was a CIA agent on a secret mission to sabotage the Khmer Rouge regime.

He claimed that his father had also been a CIA agent, using the cover of 'headmaster of Benton Road Secondary School', and that he had been trained in modern spying techniques at Loughborough.

Headed 'Details of my course at the Annexe CIA college in Loughborough, England,' Dewhirst writes that he was taught how to use weapons as part of his induction into the U.S foreign intelligence agency.

Mixing elements of his own life story with fiction to satisfy his captors, the Briton also claimed that there were other CIA colleges in the UK - Cardiff, Aberdeen, Portsmouth, Bristol, Leicester and Doncaster.

He said his 'handler' was a man called 'Colonel Peter Johnson', and that his university bursar was a CIA major. The confession is signed and dated 5.7.1978.

Dewhirst's thumbprint is alongside his signature. Like thousands of other victims in the former school building, which is now a memorial to the dead, the 'confession' was dictated to him by Duch and his interrogators.

John's parents both died before he was captured.

At home in Cumbria, 31 years on, Hilary Dewhirst did not attend Duch's trial - at which he initially pleaded guilty.

Instead, Rob Hamill, the brother of John's sailing companion Kerry, spoke for both of them, having been handed a note from Hilary to present to the court about her feelings.

Facing Duch for the first time, Hamill spoke of wanting to make his brother's killer suffer.

'I've imagined you shackled, starved and clubbed. I have imagined you being nearly drowned and having your throat cut.'

But he added: 'It was you who should bear the burden, you to suffer, not the families of the people you killed. From this day forward, I feel nothing towards you.

'To me, what you did removed you from the ranks of being human.'

That is a view shared by Hilary. Now a solicitor in Cumbria, she has not uttered John's name in more than three decades.

'I have experienced death and grief. This is different. It's everlasting,' she tells me. 'I can accept death completely. It's what happened to my brother that I can't accept.

'The fact that the torture was so extreme, lasting not half a day, but months, makes it an inhuman act. It takes the humanity of the person.

'The person my brother had been, was taken away during that torture. For a human being to do that to another human being - that's not a human act.

'I don't know how my brother died. I have heard reports of people bleeding to death and having their heads smashed from behind beside mass graves.

'I don' t know if knowing what really happened can make me feel any worse. If I feel like this after 31 years, a whole country must feel the same.'

But she also hopes that some good will come from the trial of her brother's killers.
'What happened in Cambodia isn't generally known to today's generation,' she says.

'It should be part of history lessons. People should remember what happened there.'

The Khmer Rouge was finally driven from power in 1979 after neighbouring Vietnam invaded.

What was discovered there shocked the world: the death rate was far higher than during the Nazi holocaust.

Pol Pot remained a free man, however, living with the rump of his Khmer Rouge cadres near the border with Thailand until his death in 1998.

'We need to understand the person [Duch] standing there,' adds Hilary.

'He's supposed to be full of remorse. It's an opportunity for him to be held accountable. But, personally, I can't see how it can possibly make any difference.'

Yet the trial will help ensure that what happened to John Dawson Dewhirst - proud Englishman, sports fanatic and man of letters - will never be forgotten, along with two million others slaughtered in Cambodia's Killing Fields.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Khmer Rouge chief ready for justice over John Dewhirst murder

Aug 13 2009
By Michael Wood
The Journal (UK)


THE man being tried for the murder of a North East teacher in Cambodia yesterday asked to be given "the harshest punishment".

The chief of the Khmer Rouge’s main torture centre, is being tried by a UN-backed tribunal on genocide charges.

Kaing Guek Eav, known as Comrade Duch, has already confessed to murdering John Dewhirst (pictured) in 1978 while the Newcastle teacher was backpacking.

Mr Dewhirst, 26, was captured, tortured and killed at the now infamous prison Tuol Sleng, known as S21. He was the only Briton among 17,000 people to die at the jail.

He was captured during a career break from a teaching job in Japan. He had been sailing through the Gulf of Thailand with friends Stuart Glass, a Canadian, and New Zealander Kerry Hamil.

Their motorised boat the Foxy Lady drifted into Cambodian waters, raising suspicions among the Khmer Rouge, which swooped.

Mr Glass was killed instantly but the other two were taken to S21 where they were forced to sign bogus confessions that they were CIA agents. Mr Dewhirst’s note, written in Cambodian and English even said his father was a CIA agent whose cover was as headmaster of Benton Road Secondary School.

It added that he had been recruited as a spy by his father and, between 1972 and 1976, he was trained in espionage techniques, including weapons handling.

Yesterday, Comrade Duch, who headed S21, said: “I accept the regret, the sorrow and the suffering of the million Cambodian people who lost their husbands and wives. I would like the Cambodian people to condemn me to the harshest punishment.”

Mr Dewhirst’s sister Hilary Holland, 53, who lives in Cumbria, has spoken about how she is still haunted by his death.

Duch is the first of five senior Khmer Rouge figures scheduled to face trials and the only one to acknowledge responsibility for his actions. His trial, which started in March, is expected to finish by the end of the year.

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Khmer Rouge killers 'burned Briton alive': How John Dewhirst may have met a brutal end at hands of Pol Pot's regime

05th August 2009
By Richard Shears
Daily Mail (UK)


A Briton held in a Cambodian torture camp may have been burned alive, a war crimes trial heard today.

John Dewhirst, 26, was on a sailing trip in 1978 with an American, an Australian, a New Zealander and a Canadian when their yacht was intercepted by the Khmer Rouge.

The Canadian, Stuart Glass, was shot dead. Mr Dewhirst and the other men were interrogated at the notorious S-21 prison in Cambodian capital Phnom Penh then killed. Exactly how they met their end has never been known.

But Cheam Soeu, 52, then a guard at the camp, told how he saw colleagues lead one of the men out on the street one night, sit him down, then put a car tyre over him.

Speaking at the trial of notorious prison commander Kaing Guek Eav, he said they then set the tyre and the body on fire, adding: 'I saw the charred torso and black burned legs.'

Mr Dewhirst had been in the Gulf of Thailand with his friends when they drifted near the Cambodian coast.

It had always been assumed the teacher from Newcastle, who was accused of being a spy, was then tortured and shot, as countless other prisoners of Pol Pot's ruthless communist regime had been.

Earlier this year, the commander of the S-21 prison, Kaing Guek Eav - also known as Duch - told the tribunal that it was Pol Pot, who died in 1998, who personally ordered that the four Westerners be executed and then burned.

'I received an order from my superiors that the four Westerners had to be smashed and burned to ashes,' he said. 'It was an absolute order from my superiors. Pol Pot, not Uncle Nuon' - the regime's second in command - 'personally ordered to burn the bodies.'

But Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch, yesterday denied the story, claiming he ordered the four to be killed before being burned.

'It's hard for me to believe that the prisoner was burned alive,' he said.

'I believe nobody would dare to violate my order. They had to be killed and then burned to ash.'
Khmer Rouge torture victim was starved to the point he 'dreamed about eating human flesh'
Duch is the first senior regime member to stand trial at the UN-assisted tribunal in Phnom Penh.

Prisoners in the notorious prison would be tortured with beatings and electric shocks, interrogated and then shot, their bodies dumped in what became known as the killing fields. Many of those executed were burned.

Before his capture and execution, Mr Dewhirst was on a dream voyage with his friends cruising the Gulf of Thailand.

Then they were captured at gunpoint by a Khmer Rouge gunboat when they strayed too close to the Cambodian coast and were accused of being spies.

Mr Dewhirst was forced to make a signed confession that he was a CIA agent, having been recruited by his father at the age of 12.

His father, he was forced to erroneously claim, was a CIA agent whose cover was that of a secondary school headmaster.

In signing the confession, he had also signed his own death warrant.

The only Briton to die in the killing fields, Mr Dewhirst was executed just a few weeks before Pol Pot's regime was overthrown by invading forces from Vietnam.

Kaing Guek Eav has told the U.N.-backed genocide tribunal that he wanted to apologise for his actions under the Khmer Rouge, whose radical policies while in power from 1975 to 1979 left an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians dead.

The hearing began in February.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Khmer Rouge trial: the British victim John Dewhirst

John Dewhirst (David Hollins/North News and Picture)

March 31, 2009
Anne Barrowclough
The Times (UK)


As hundreds of Cambodians crowded into a courtroom yesterday to see the chief torturer of the Khmer Rouge finally brought to trial, a country lawyer in Britain quietly got on with her work. Only those closest to her know how, 30 years ago, Comrade Duch destroyed Hilary Holland’s family.

In 1978 Ms Holland’s brother, John Dewhirst, 26, was captured by the Khmer Rouge and tortured and killed at Tuol Sleng. He was the only Briton among 17,000 Cambodians to die at the regime’s infamous prison.

Three decades on, as Cambodia watches the first trials of the Khmer Rouge’s murderous leaders, his fate continues to haunt his sister.

“The horrific circumstances and the manner of how John was killed still makes it so difficult to cope with,” Ms Holland told The Times from her home in Cumbria.

The young Newcastle teacher had been sailing through the Gulf of Thailand with two friends in July 1978 when their vessel was intercepted by a Khmer Rouge patrol boat. The skipper, Stuart Glass, a Canadian, was killed instantly. Mr Dewhirst and the other crew member, Kerry Hamil, a New Zealander, were sent to Tuol Sleng, a school turned into a torture centre presided over by the brutal Kang Kek Ieu – better known as Duch.

There, like thousands of others, they were tortured until they “confessed” to being CIA agents. Then they were taken to Cheong Ek, a pretty orchard on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, and bludgeoned to death with an iron bar.

Back in Britain, Ms Holland was concerned at her younger brother’s unusual silence but it was not until she switched on the news one evening that she learnt he had become a victim of a regime she had hardly heard of. Soon after, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office told her that he had been captured and imprisoned by the Khmer Rouge and was almost certainly dead.

The pain of that moment has never left her. “It was indescribable,” she said. “I don’t think I have got the words to explain how I felt. I used to think that if you could die from emotions like this, I would have died. I have experienced death – the death of my husband when I had two young children – but this is completely different.”

Yesterday Duch identified himself quietly before the charges against him were read out to a UNbacked war crimes tribunal: crimes against humanity, war crimes, premeditated murder and torture. He is the first of five former leaders of the Khmer Rouge to be brought to trial.

The others were members of Pol Pot’s inner circle: Nuom Chea, or “Brother Number Two”, who was in charge of security; Ieng Sary, the former foreign minister, and his wife Ieng Thirith; and Khieu Samphan, the former head of state.

Nearly two million Cambodians died between 1975 and 1979 as Pol Pot pursued his vision of an agrarian Utopia. Tuol Sleng, also known as S21, was the most notorious jail: of 17,000 people sent there, only 15 survived.

According to the thick file of charges read to the court: “Every prisoner who arrived at S-21 was destined for execution. The policy at S-21 was that no prisoner could be released. Prisoners brought to S-21 by mistake were executed in order to ensure secrecy and security.”

On the orders of Duch, a former maths teacher, victims were plunged headfirst into tanks of water, often drowning; they were given electric shocks to their genitals and eardrums. Some were hooked up to intravenous pumps and literally bled dry.

It was a cruel fate that delivered Mr Dewhirst into Duch’s hands. A care-free, adventurous young man, he had taken a break from his teaching job in Japan to go sailing with Mr Glass and Mr Hamil on their motorised junk Foxy Lady. It drifted into Cambodian waters and, to the paranoid Khmer Rouge, their presence had no innocent explanation.

Even after she heard of his incarceration in S-21, his sister hoped that his friendly nature would help him to survive. “I thought if anyone could develop a personal relationship with his jailers it would be him,” she said. “I thought he would charm his way out of there.”

In fact, nothing could have saved him – although the meticulous Duch, who catalogued details of all his prisoners, described him as a polite young man.

Before he died, Mr Dewhirst was forced to write a detailed confession saying that he had been trained as a CIA spy. The confession, in Cambodian and English, entitled “Details of my course at the Annexe CIA college in Loughborough, England”, claims that he was recruited into the CIA by his father and from 1972-76 was taught agency techniques, including weapons-handling, at his teacher training college in Leicestershire.

A mixture of the dull and the ludicrous, it claims that Loughborough was one of six CIA colleges in Britain. Others, John wrote, were in Cardiff, Aberdeen, Portsmouth, Bristol and Doncaster. His college, he said, was run by “retired Colonel Peter Johnson” while the bursar was a CIA major.

Among many bizarre “admissions” was a claim that his father was a CIA agent whose cover was “headmaster of Benton Road Secondary School”.

The confession is signed and dated 5/7/1978. Mr Dewhirst’s thumbprint lies alongside his signature. As with thousands of inmates at S-21, it was probably dictated to him by his interrogators on Duch’s orders.

Duch’s trial is of great significance to Cambodia, with its former leaders going unpunished for 30 years. It is expected to be a catharsis for the victims, who still do not understand why their families were taken from them.

Ms Holland also wants answers. She wants the Khmer Rouge leaders to admit their guilt and explain why they destroyed so many lives. “There must be a public accountability,” she said. “I would like it to be seen that they understand what they did.”

It is too painful for Ms Holland to attend Duch’s trial but she is relieved that, after all this time, the leaders will finally be brought to justice. “It’s of such historical importance,” she said. “No one is going to undo the horrors but bringing these people to account is important. I don’t care what happens to them but I would like them to tell the truth, to explain their motivation."

Duch, 66, who was arrested in 1999 after being tracked down by a journalist, is alone among the defendants in expressing remorse and has agreed to cooperate with the tribunal. At a procedural hearing last month, he made it clear through his lawyer that he would use his trial to apologise to his victims, although he does not expect “immediate” forgiveness.

His French lawyer, Francois Roux, said yesterday: “After ten years of prison, at last the day is coming where he can in public respond to the questions.”

But Duch can expect no forgiveness from Ms Holland. “People like Duch, who ordered the atrocities, were the worst,” she said.

Slaughter of the innocents

- The Khmer Rouge, the armed wing of the Cambodian Communist Party, took Phnom Penh in 1975 after a five-year civil war, leaving their leader, Pol Pot, free to pursue his vision of an agrarian Utopia

- He declared that the nation would start again at “year zero” and abolished money, private property and religion, and exiled millions of people to collective farms. Nearly two million people – more than a fifth of the population – were executed or died of disease, starvation or simple overwork in the next four years

- Intellectuals were sought out and killed, often for something as innocent as wearing spectacles or speaking a foreign language

- The most notorious jail was S-21, a former school in Phnom Penh run by the brtual Comrade Duch – a one-time maths teacher – where more than 17,000 men, women and children were imprisoned. Only 15 are known to have survived

- Vietnamese troops invaded Cambodia late in 1978 and installed a communist Government made up mostly of former Khmer Rouge cadres – including the current Prime Minister, Hun Sen. Fighting continued between the new Government and Khmer Rouge remnants in Thailand until 1991 Source: Times archives