Categorized | General

BRITAIN MADE repeated efforts to free Rudolf Hess Adolf Hitler’s one-time deputy from Spandau prison but each time were

Posted on 25 September 2010

BRITAIN MADE repeated efforts to free Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler’s one-time deputy, from Spandau prison but each time were thwarted by the Russians, show newly released documents on the internment of Adolf Hitler’s former deputy. Letters sent by the British military in Berlin also accuse Hess’s Soviet guards of mental cruelty. Several times in the 1970s, British officials tried to persuade the Russians to try to persuade them to release Hess or relax his harsh conditions. But each time they were rebuffed.
The story of Rudolf Hess is one of the strangest to emerge from the Second World War.The former First World War soldier, who joined the Nazi Party in 1920, was captured after flying alone to Scotland in May 1941 to seek an Anglo- German peace deal. Hitler said he had gone mad, but Josef Stalin, the Soviet dictator, suspected some sort of deal was being done with Britain and Nazi Germany, hence the later rough treatment.In 1946, Hess was sentenced to life at the Nuremberg war trials and later transferred to Spandau in the British-controlled sector of Berlin. The four occupying powers, the US, Britain, France and the Soviet Union took turns to guard him.After 1966, when Baldur von Schirach, the Hitler Youth leader, and Albert Speer, Hitler’s armament minister, were released, Hess was alone. By 1974, several governments, including Britain, America and France, were calling for his release on humanitarian grounds.The correspondence, released under the Freedom of Information Act, shows the Queen wrote to the former German chancellor, Willi Brandt, saying Britain was doing all it could to try to free him.

These efforts were stepped up as Hess approached his 80th birthday But by May 1974 all hope had faded. Of pressing concern was the increasingly cruel treatment by the Soviets.In a letter by a senior official in the British Military Government to the British ambassador in Bonn paints a particularly bleak picture. Robert de Burlet, who had diplomatic responsibility for Spandau and visited Hess several times, wrote: “now that the possibility of a tripartite demarche to the Russians to appeal for Hess’s release .. seems to have receded … I think I should bring up to date on the current situation at the prison.”Mr de Burlet said the Russian governor at Spandau has demanded that Hess be deprived of his glasses between 10pm and 7am every night. The Russians also insisted Hess burn his notebook before being allowed a new one, restricted his access to the prison garden and refused him physical contact with any visitor, including his wife and son.Mr de Burlet wrote: “This new Russian turn of the screw, is particularly unpleasant and amounts to the infliction of mental torture on the prisoner. It is made more blatant by the fact that since November 1959 when Hess cut his wrists with a fragment of glass from his spectacles he has been given ones with plastic lenses.”Mr de Burlet says that in the “course of argument” with the Soviet governor, whom he describes as “short, fat and sinister”, he pointed this out but “he refused to listen”.He adds: “It is strange but true, that the Allies, and in particular the British, now have a dual role at Spandau. On the one hand we are carrying out the sentence passed on Hess and on the other hand we are additionally forced into the role of his protectors against the grosser Soviet violations of his minimal privileges.Mr de Burlet goes on: “We might, of course, tell the Russians to go jump in the Volga .. but this might lead to violent protests and …

Some come from countries where there is not much respect for the police, for obvious good reason.”They need to understand that we police this country by consent. [Criminals within] these communities need to understand our system of law. They seem to be looking for ways of not responding according to the spirit of the Act,” he said.Marcus Williamson, 39, a computer expert, has put in several requests under the Act, but has been knocked back on the grounds that answering would not be in the public interest. While the number of organised criminals is only a tiny proportion within each community, they are often prepared to use extreme violence, and they appear to be increasingly effective at organising serious crime.Sir John Stevens, the out-going Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, in an interview with The Independent, warned that criminal elements within the communities had little respect for the police and wrongly considered them to be a “soft touch”.The Met has set up a south Asian intelligence cell to target several of the groups and are planning a number of operations against them over the coming months.

Scotland Yard is stepping up surveillance of suspects in 16 foreign communities amid fears that organised criminals and gangs within these groups are becoming increasingly active and violent.
The “danger” list is based on police intelligence which indicates that a small number of gang members and violent criminals are having an impact on London.Turkish heroin importers, Albanian pimps, Kosovan gunmen, Nigerian fraudsters and Chinese people-traffickers are among the gangsters. Although I am a UK citizen I had a better experience applying for information in the United States.”. He wanted to know more about a businessman who had taken a job with MI6 who was referred to by the BBC.”The response is not in the spirit of the Act,” he said. “They are waiting until the last minute and then coming up with excuses about cost It’s a feeble interpretation of the law.

This post was written by:

admin - who has written 720 posts on Megaman Community.


Contact the author

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Next Articles

Information