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The Gareth Jones Diaries - A Man Who Knew Too Much www.garethjones.org

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The Gareth Jones Diaries. A Man Who Knew Too Much www.garethjones.org. Overview. Part 1 – Who Was Gareth Jones? Early Life / Education / Credentials. Part 2 – The Gareth Jones Diaries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

The Gareth JonesDiaries

- A Man Who Knew Too Muchwww.garethjones.org

Page 2: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

OverviewPart 1 – Who Was Gareth Jones?1. Early Life / Education / Credentials.

Part 2 – The Gareth Jones Diaries1. Personal Diaries, Letters & Newspaper Articles of his Eyewitness

Observations of Ukrainian Famine Conditions in 1930, 31 & 33.

Part 3 – Covering-up the Famine1. Denigration by Walter Duranty in The New York Times in 1933.2. Gareth’s Forgotten Role in Randolph Hearst’s ‘Famine’ in 1935.

Part 4 – Shooting the Messenger & Airbrushing the Truth 1. Soon After… Mysteriously Murdered by Japanese-Controlled

Chinese Bandits (or Soviet Retribution)?2. Memorial Plaque - Aberystwyth, Wales, 2006

Page 3: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Early Life• Mother, Former Governess

to John Hughes’ family between 1889-92, founder of Hughesovka (now Donetsk).

• Father, Headmaster Barry County Grammar School.

Page 4: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Early Life• Mother, Former Governess

to John Hughes’ family between 1889-92, founder of Hughesovka (now Donetsk).

• Father, Headmaster Barry County Grammar School.

• Gareth, Born 1905 in Barry, South Wales.

Page 5: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Academic Career•1922-26 – 1st Class

Honours Degree in French & German from Aberystwyth University, Wales.

•1923-25 - Université de Strasbourg: Diplôme Supérieur des Etudes Françaises.

•1926 – Exhibition Scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge.

•1927, 1928 & 1929 - College Prizeman – Plus Senior Scholar in 1928.

•1929 – 1st Class Honours in German and Russian, with distinction in Oral Examinations.

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1930-31 – With Lloyd George • One month unsuccessful

trial with The Times and through family acquaintance Tom Jones, (the long-standing British Government Cabinet Secretary) is introduced to Former World War One British Prime Minister David Lloyd George.

• Appointed Foreign Affairs Advisor to Lloyd George Jan 1st 1930.

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1930-31 – With Lloyd George

• Visits USSR for 1st time as the eyes & the ears of the Lloyd George, but with an ‘open mind’ in August 1930; soon after British Diplomatic relations are restored.

• On Leaving USSR, Gareth writes candidly to his parents:

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Hurray! It is wonderful to be in Germany again, absolutely wonderful.  Russia is in a very bad state; rotten, no food, only bread; oppression, injustice, misery among the workers and 90% discontented.  I saw some very bad things, which made me mad to think that people like [the Webbs] go there and come back, after having been led round by the nose and had enough to eat, and say that Russia is a paradise.  In the South there is talk of a new revolution, but it will never come off,

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because the Army and the G.P.U. (Secret Police) are too strong.  The winter is going to be one of great suffering there and there is starvation.  The government is the most brutal in the world.  The peasants hate the Communists.  This year thousands and thousands of the best men in Russia have been sent to Siberia and the prison island of Solovki. People are now speaking openly against the Government.

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In the Donetz Basin conditions are unbearable Thousands are leaving. I shall never forget the night I spent in a railway station on the way to Hughesovka. One reason why I left Hughesovka so quickly was that all I could [get to eat was a roll of bread.]

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1930 – October -The London Times: “Two Russias”

Through Lord Lothian, Gareth was introduced to Geoffrey Dawson, Editor of The Times (who had no Moscow Correspondent) & invited to write 3 ‘uncensored’ articles, in which he stated:

Click HERE for link to articles

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1930 - The London Times: “Two Russias”

• “…foreign delegations [are] blissfully ignorant of the hunger, discontent, opposition, and hatred.”

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1930 - The London Times: “Two Russias”

• “…foreign delegations [are] blissfully ignorant of the hunger, discontent, opposition, and hatred.”

• “…Donetz Basin, where there has been a serious breakdown in food supplies.”

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1930 - The London Times: “Two Russias”

• “…foreign delegations [are] blissfully ignorant of the hunger, discontent, opposition, and hatred.”

• “…Donetz Basin, where there has been a serious breakdown in food supplies.”

• A miner expressed …“Everybody is going away from the Donetz Basin, because there is no food here.  There is nothing in Russia.  The situation is terrible.”

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1930 - The London Times: “Two Russias”

• “…foreign delegations [are] blissfully ignorant of the hunger, discontent, opposition, and hatred.”

• “…Donetz Basin, where there has been a serious breakdown in food supplies.”

• A miner expressed …“Everybody is going away from the Donetz Basin, because there is no food here.  There is nothing in Russia.  The situation is terrible.”

• “The present food shortage was attributed by most Russians to two causes – the agricultural revolution begun last year and the absence of a free market...  “It is all the fault of this collectivisation, which the peasants hate.  There is no meat, nothing at all.”

Page 16: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1931 – Ivy Lee (PR), New York• Head-hunted from Lloyd

George’s Secretariat to work for world’s leading PR agency on Wall Street as their Soviet expert,

Page 17: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1931 – Ivy Lee (PR), New York• Head-hunted from Lloyd

George’s Secretariat to work for world’s leading PR agency on Wall Street as their Soviet expert,

• Chaperoned 21 year old Jack Heinz’s on a month-long ‘unescorted’ visit to USSR in August 1931.

Page 18: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1931 – Ivy Lee (PR), New York• Afterwards, Heinz compiled a privately published &

‘Anonymously written’ book in spring 1932, entitled: “Experiences of Russia – 1931 – A Diary” – i.e., Gareth’s Diaries.

Page 19: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1931 – Ivy Lee (PR), New York• Afterwards, Heinz compiled a privately published &

‘Anonymously written’ book in spring 1932, entitled: “Experiences of Russia – 1931 – A Diary” – i.e., Gareth’s Diaries.

• Arguably, the first Western book to ‘honestly’ report the onset of famine conditions within the Soviet Union, again citing variations of the word ‘starve’ on half a dozen occasions…

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1931 Experiences of Russia – A DiaryGareth signed the Foreword:“With knowledge of Russia and the Russian language, it was possible to get off the beaten path, to talk with grimy workers and rough peasants, as well as such leaders as Lenin’s widow and Karl Radek [editor of Pravda].

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1931 Experiences of Russia – A DiaryGareth signed the Foreword:“With knowledge of Russia and the Russian language, it was possible to get off the beaten path, to talk with grimy workers and rough peasants, as well as such leaders as Lenin’s widow and Karl Radek [editor of Pravda].

We visited vast engineering projects and factories, slept on the bug-infested floors of peasants’ huts, shared black bread and cabbage soup with the villagers - in short, got into direct touch with the Russian people in their struggle for existence and were thus able to test their reactions to the Soviet Government’s dramatic moves.”

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Extract from Gareth’s 1931 Diary [transcribed in next 2 slides]

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Sept 5 Woke, Keen supporter came; later whispered to Vice President, then he came & there was a complete change in his attitude. “Its terrible. We can’t speak worse than before the Rev. But 1926-27, those were fine years”. Absolute change in [his] attitude & gestures.“We’ve got to keep quiet or they will send us to Siberia .

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Then went to the Village Soviet, an old man came, whispered “It’s terrible in Kolkhoz. They took away my cows & my horse. We are starving. Look what they give us. Nothing. Nothing. Nothing! How can we live with nothing in our dvor. But we can’t say anything or they’ll send us away as they did the others. All are weeping in villages.

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Another Telling / Published Extract from Gareth’s 1931 Diary [transcribed in next slide]

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1931 As published in ‘Experiences of Russia – A Diary’

•A doctor’s wife on the boat said to Jones: 

“The peasants have been sent away in thousands to starve. They were exiled just because they worked hard all their lives.

It’s terrible how they have treated them; they have not given them anything; no bread cards even. They sent a lot to Tashkent, where I was, and just left them on the square. The exiles did not know what to do and many starved to death.”

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1931 – Oct 14th The London Times THE REAL RUSSIA  - 3 Articles

[…In which he first used the Doctor’s wife’s anecdote.]

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Back with Lloyd George in 19311932 - Oct 14th - Letter to Parents -

London Circles Knew of Raging Famine…“On Friday, I had exceptionally interesting talks …

with Prof. Jules Menken (LSE) a very well known economist.  He was appalled with the prospects: what he had seen was the complete failure of Marxism.  He dreaded this winter, when he thought millions would

die of hunger. 

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Back with Lloyd George in 19311932 - Oct 14th - Letter to Parents -

London Circles Knew of Raging Famine…“On Friday, I had exceptionally interesting talks …

with Prof. Jules Menken (LSE) a very well known economist.  He was appalled with the prospects: what he had seen was the complete failure of Marxism.  He dreaded this winter, when he thought millions would die of hunger. 

He had never seen such bungling & such breakdowns.  What struck him was the unfairness & the inequality.  He had seen hungry people one moment & the next moment he had lunched with Soviet Commissars in the Kremlin with the best caviar, fish, game & the most luxurious wines.”

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Planning a Trip to Expose the Soviet Famine• Gareth immediately penned two articles for the Cardiff

Western Mail published on Oct 15 & 17, 1932 to highlight the tragic situation entitled; “Will there be Soup?”

• In line with his Welsh Non-Conformist beliefs & virtues; Gareth decided to make a trip to view the conditions firsthand – otherwise it could have been officially denied.

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Planning a Trip to Expose the Soviet Famine• Gareth immediately penned two articles for the Cardiff

Western Mail published on Oct 15 & 17, 1932 to highlight the tragic situation entitled; “Will there be Soup?”

• In line with his Welsh Non-Conformist beliefs & virtues; Gareth decided to make a trip to view the conditions firsthand – otherwise it could have been officially denied.

• On 23 February 1933, Gareth became the first foreign journalist to fly with Hitler, the newly appointed German Chancellor (& afterwards dining privately with Goebbels…)

He prophetically wrote in the Western Mail:

“If this aeroplane should crash then the whole history of Europe would be changed. For a few feet away sits Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of Germany and leader of the most volcanic nationalist awakening which the world has seen.”

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1933 March 10th – Gareth Packed a Rucksack Full of Food from Moscow Torgsin & Caught ‘Local’ Train to Ukraine.

The following are some of his eye-witness accounts of his lone foray into Ukraine – some of you may wish to follow his handwriting as I narrate, others might wish to just close your eyes and picture the scene in your minds…

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1933 March 10th – Gareth Packed a Rucksack Full of Food from Moscow Torgsin & Caught ‘Local’ Train to Ukraine.

Boy on train asking for bread.I dropped a small piece on floor and put it in spittoon. Peasant came and picked it up & ate it.

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Peasant on train – ‘Kolkhoz had no bread’.

Many Nationalists in Ukraine

Peasant woman: “Many are dying. We’re starving. There is little cattle left. They take all grain away.

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Member Politdel

“I’ve been a member of the party for 12 years. They are now sending 2,700 from Moscow Politdel. They are the best, the strongest. It is semi-military. We’ll smash kulaks and smash opposition. We’re promoting all men who served in the civil war. The elite, chosen ones. 60% of us have been in higher educational schools.

He clenched his fist & hit down

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…with every word: resolute, ruthless, cruel:“We are all workers mainly from the factories.”

“We are going to organise. They’ll be about 4 of us in each MTC. The MTC where I shall be will look after 15 kolkhozes. We’ll give them strict control.” “The weather for the harvest is good, i.e. Lot of snow.”

“The methods of the kulaks have changed. They used to murder. Now they are subtle. Now they say “yes we’re for the Kolkhoz”,

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they’ll steal & wont work & they’ll make difficulties. They try to wreck by mean tricks, but they are not dangerous any longer.

The conductor said that there were fewer travelling now, because it was difficult to leave factory. But soon there will be a lot of people leaving Moscow for south on account of passportisation. Also there were a lot about 2 months ago.

I asked a man (Jew or Armenian) where he was going.

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He had a lot of gold teeth and said: “I’ve left Leningrad and am going to Kharkov to look for a job. I have no vote. They have deprived me of my rights, because I was a private trader.”

Boy Komsomolets:“Very strict now. They are dying in villages. In Belgorad there is bread, but that’s a town.

“One woman stole 5 beets & got 10 years imprisonment.”

“If you steel coal from station, 10 yrs. Very bad & we don’t know if it’ll be better.”

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Talked to a group of women peasants; “We’re starving. Two months we’ve hardly had bread. We’re from the Ukraine and we’re trying to go north. They’re dying quietly in the villages. Kolkhozes are terrible. They won’t give us any tickets and we don’t know what to do. Can’t buy bread for money.

A chicken was 20 rubles. Milk - 3 rubles a litre.

I dropped orange peel in spittoon. Peasant picked it up, ate it. Later apple core. Man speaking German same story “Tell them in England, Starving, bellies extended. Hunger

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“Be careful in the villages because the Ukrainians are desperate. They will grab any bread they can see.”

Komsomolets: “When I left my mother and her sisters a couple of days ago, they had 2 glasses of flour left.”

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First day[‘s] march

From train, I walked about an hour, chatted to all. The same story.

There was a kolkhoz.

Asked children outside hut: God? “Of course not. There is no God.”

Talked to men on track. It was getting [to] sunset. One of them said:- “you’d better not go…

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…further, for hooligans will rob you of your coat & your food & all.”

The other – handsome, determined young Communist, said “ Yes, its dangerous. Come and stay with us in our village.”

Communist took me along to a Selsoviet; full of young people, children. One of them belly swollen.

All people say same ”XЛEБА HETУ BCE nyxnoie” (No Bread Here – All are Swollen) [Written phonetically in Russian – & translated later] One woman said:- “We are looking forward to death.”

In one village, all bread had gone two months ago, & potatoes had run out, there was only bypяk (beetroot)

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… for one month. How can they live till next harvest?

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Two soldiers came … to arrest a peasant thief who had killed another. The thief had gone to steal potatoes from the hut of another. The owner of the hut had come out & the peasant had stabbed him with a knife. There were many cases of that happening. The Red Army soldier who came the next morning also said, “Don’t travel by night. There are too many wild…

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uncultured men want food and to steal.” Went to bed late, slept on floor. In one bed; Pres., his wife & her sister & small bed the child. Woke up next morning before 8.

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Talked to all the people as I tramped along the railway track. Ravens or crows (with…

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… grey cap). White expanse of snow.Moscow – Sebastopol train rattled past with sleeping wagon. Politdel party members, etc. Went into village. There is no bread. “We’ve had no bread for 2 months”. “Each dvor [dvir] had one or 2 cows. Now none. There are almost no oxen left & the horses have been dying off.”

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“How can I live? I got a lb of bread for all my family & we came here for a short time, there is no food here. My family is in Kharkoff & I don’t know how they’ll live.” “We’re all getting (swollen) nyxливi.” “In this village 5 or 6 kulak families were sent away to Siberia & to cut wood in the Northern forests,

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…also to build a railway in Murmansk.” But some of the kulaks live better than those who remain in the villages because there is now more bread in the towns. “In the south 20% of the population have died of hunger” said the young worker “and in some parts 50%. They’re murdering us.”

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Then, onto the railway and on to Ukraine.

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In the Ukraine. A little later I crossed the border from Greater Russia into the Ukraine. Everywhere I talked to peasants who walked past – they all had the same story; “There is no bread – we haven’t had bread for 2 months – a lot are dying.” The first village had no more potatoes left and the store of БҮРЯК (beetroot) was running out.

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They all said ‘the cattle is dying. (Nothing to feed.) НЕЧЕВО

КОРМить.” We used to feed the world now we are hungry. How can we sow when we have few horses left? How will we be able to work in the fields when we are weak from want of food? Then I caught up…

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…[with] a bearded peasant who was walking along . His feet were covered with sacking. We started talking. He spoke in Ukrainian Russian. I gave him a lump of bread and of cheese. “You could not buy that anywhere for 20 rubles. There just is no food.” We walked along and talked; “Before the war this was all gold. We had horses and cows and pigs and chickens. Now we are ruined. We are (the living dead) ПОГИБЛИ. You see that field. It was all gold, but now look at the weeds. The weeds were peeping up over the snow.” “Before the war we could have boots and meat and butter. We were the richest…

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…country in the world for grain.We fed the world. Now they have taken all away from us. “Now people steal much more. Four days ago, they stole my horse. Hooligans came. There that’s where I saw the tract of the horse.” “A horse is better than a tractor. A tractor goes and stops, but a horse goes all the time. A tractor cannot give manure, but a horse can. How can the spring sowing be good? There is little…

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…seed and the people are too weak. We are all weak and hungry. “The winter sowing was bad, and the winter ploughing was also bad.” He took me along to his cottage. His daughter and three young children. Two of the smaller children were swollen. “If you had come before the Revolution we would have given you chicken and eggs and milk and fine bread. Now we have no bread in the house. They are killing us.” “People are dying of hunger.” There was in the…

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…hut, a spindle [which] the daughter showed me how to make thread. The peasant showed me his shirt, which was home-made and some of his sacking which had been home-made. “But the Bolsheviks are crushing that. They want the factory to make everything.” The peasant then ate some very thin soup with a scrap of potato. No bread in house. The white bread [of Gareth’s] they thought was wonderful.

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Everybody on the track said the same: “Lots of people dying. Only beetroot. Too weak for spring sowing. One group: “There are thousands of unemployed. Their bread card is taken away and they have nothing. On April 1st there’ll be another (оқращєнue) cut. Go down to the Poltava district and there you’ll see hundreds of cottages empty. In a village of 300 huts only about 100 will have people living in them & others have died or gone away, but most have died.”

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Escorted to ‘Kharkoff’After two days ‘tramping’ along the track, according to one of

Gareth’s 1935 American syndicated articles for Randolph Hearst, his trek came to an abrupt end:

“It happened in a small station, where I was talking with a group of peasants: “We are dying,” they wailed and poured out the old story of their woes. A red-faced, well-fed OGPU policeman in uniform approached us and stood listening for a few moments.

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Escorted to ‘Kharkoff’After two days ‘tramping’ along the track, according to one of

Gareth’s 1935 American syndicated articles for Randolph Hearst, his trek came to an abrupt end:

“It happened in a small station, where I was talking with a group of peasants: “We are dying,” they wailed and poured out the old story of their woes. A red-faced, well-fed OGPU policeman in uniform approached us and stood listening for a few moments.

Then came the outburst, and from his lips poured a series of Russian curses. “Clear away, you! Stop telling him about hunger! Can’t you see he’s a foreigner?”

He turned to me and roared: “Come along. What are you doing here? Show me your documents.”

Visions of a secret police prison darted before my mind. The OGPU man looked at my passport and beckoned to one of the crowd, whom I had taken to be an ordinary passenger, but who was obviously in the secret police. 

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Escorted to ‘Kharkoff’He came to me and in the most polite and respectful terms

bade me follow him. “I shall have to take you to the nearest city, Kharkov.”

Throughout the journey I impressed him with the fact that I had interviewed Lenin’s widow, and a number of commissars and great panjandrums of the Soviet régime and by the time we reached Kharkov I believed he was thoroughly convinced that any real arrest of myself would plunge Russia and Europe and the United States into a world war.

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Escorted to ‘Kharkoff’He came to me and in the most polite and respectful terms

bade me follow him. “I shall have to take you to the nearest city, Kharkov.”

Throughout the journey I impressed him with the fact that I had interviewed Lenin’s widow, and a number of commissars and great panjandrums of the Soviet régime, and by the time we reached Kharkov I believed he was thoroughly convinced that any real arrest of myself would plunge Russia and Europe and the United States into a world war.

For he decided to accompany me to a foreign consulate in Kharkov and he left me at the doorstep, while I, rejoicing at my freedom bade him a polite farewell – an anti-climax but a welcome one.

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Queues for bread. Erika [from the German Consulate] and I walked along about a hundred ragged pale people. Militiaman came out of shop whose windows had been battered in and were covered with wood and said: “There is no bread today.” Shouts from angry peasants also there. “But citizens, there is no bread.” “How long here?” I asked a man. “Two days.”They would not go away but remained. Sometimes cart came with bread; waiting with forlorn hope.

Now in Kharkiv

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Queues of 7000 stand. They begin queuing up at 3-4 o’clock in afternoon to get bread next morning at 7. It is freezing. – many degrees of frost.

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Terror much worse. In 1931 it was lightened. Now bad again for bourgeoisie. Stricter. When Consul telephoned the Foreign Office, said; ‘Yes Jones. He arrived on foot.’

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GPU much stronger than it was & has complete control.

1921. German: Now much worse - much worse than war years also. Then there was no food in the towns, but the peasants had food. Now neither the peasants nor the town have food.

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The GPU is getting more and more powerful.

Stalin & GPU now ruling Russia.

New Ukrainian Policy.

In the last few weeks there has been a beginning of Russification again.Muscovites have been placed in leading posts in Kharkoff & more Russian is to be taught in the schools.

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Personal Letter to Lloyd George

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Who was Gareth Jones?From United Press Moscow Correspondent, Eugene Lyons’

1937 book; Assignment in Utopia:

“The first reliable report of the Russian famine was given to the world by an ‘English’ journalist, a certain Gareth Jones, at one time secretary to Lloyd George. Jones had a conscientious streak in his make-up which took him on a secret journey into the Ukraine and a brief walking tour through its countryside.

That same streak was to take him a few years later into the interior of China during political disturbances, and was to cost him his life at the hands of Chinese military bandits. An earnest and meticulous little man, Gareth Jones was the sort who carries a note-book and unashamedly records your words as you talk. Patiently he went from one correspondent to the next, asking questions and writing down the answers...”

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Gareth Held Berlin Press Conference where he Exposes the Famine.First USA Newspaper reports published same day on 29th March 1933.

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Articles In Europe

31st March 1933 – London Evening Standard.1st April 1933 – Berliner Tageblatt by Paul Scheffer.

Plus Series of (20) Articles by Gareth in London Daily Express, Financial News & Cardiff Western Mail in Early April 1933.

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Throwing Down Jones? From Eugene Lyons’ 1937 book; Assignment in Utopia:

On emerging from Russia, Jones made a statement which, startling though it sounded, was little more than a summary of what the correspondents and foreign diplomats had told him. To protect us… he emphasized his Ukrainian foray rather than our conversations as the chief source of his information.

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Throwing Down Jones? From Eugene Lyons’ 1937 book; Assignment in Utopia:

On emerging from Russia, Jones made a statement which, startling though it sounded, was little more than a summary of what the correspondents and foreign diplomats had told him. To protect us… he emphasized his Ukrainian foray rather than our conversations as the chief source of his information.

In any case… with preparations under way for the trial of the British [Metrovik] engineers, the need to remain on friendly terms with the censors … was for all of us a compelling professional necessity.

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Throwing Down Jones? From Eugene Lyons’ 1937 book; Assignment in Utopia:

On emerging from Russia, Jones made a statement which, startling though it sounded, was little more than a summary of what the correspondents and foreign diplomats had told him. To protect us… he emphasized his Ukrainian foray rather than our conversations as the chief source of his information.

In any case… with preparations under way for the trial of the British [Metrovik] engineers, the need to remain on friendly terms with the censors … was for all of us a compelling professional necessity.

Throwing down Jones was as unpleasant a chore as fell to any of us in years of juggling facts to please dictatorial regimes, but throw him down we did… Poor Gareth Jones must have been the most surprised human being alive when the facts he so painstakingly garnered from our mouths were snowed under by our denials.

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Stalin’s Apologist Walter Duranty – 31/31933, New York Times

“Mr. Jones is a man of a keen and active mind, and he has taken the trouble to learn Russian, which he speaks with considerable fluency, but the writer thought Mr. Jones' judgment was somewhat hasty and asked him on what it was based. It appeared that he had made a forty-mile walk through villages in the neighborhood of Kharkov and had found conditions sad.”

“…There is no actual starvation or deaths from starvation, but there is widespread mortality from diseases due to malnutrition.”

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March 19.

Met Litvinoff.

“I don’t trust Duranty. He still believes in Collectivisation. “

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Gareth Jones’ Rebuttal Letter to the Editor of the New York Times – 13 May 1933

•…Journalists, on the other hand, are allowed to write, but the censorship has turned them into masters of euphemism and understatement.  Hence they give “famine” the polite name of  “food shortage” and “starving to death” is softened down to read as widespread mortality from diseases due to malnutrition.”

•… May I in conclusion congratulate the Soviet Foreign Office on its skill in concealing the true situation in the U.S.S.R.?  Moscow is not Russia, and the sight of well fed people there tends to hide the real Russia.

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1933 – ‘Joneski’ Litvinov Ban – Correspondence from Gareth to a Friend…

"Alas! You will be very amused to hear that the inoffensive little 'Joneski' has achieved the dignity of being a marked man on the black list of the OGPU and is barred from entering the Soviet Union. I hear that there is a long list of crimes which I have committed under my name in the secret police file in Moscow and funnily enough espionage is said to be among them.

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1933 – ‘Joneski’ Litvinov Ban – Correspondence from Gareth to a Friend…

"Alas! You will be very amused to hear that the inoffensive little 'Joneski' has achieved the dignity of being a marked man on the black list of the OGPU and is barred from entering the Soviet Union. I hear that there is a long list of crimes which I have committed under my name in the secret police file in Moscow and funnily enough espionage is said to be among them. As a matter of fact Litvinoff sent a special cable from Moscow to the Soviet Embassy in London to tell them to make the strongest of complaints to Mr. Lloyd George about me."

Page 79: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1933-34, The ‘Wilderness’ Year

• Snubbed by Lloyd George (for using his name to give credence by association to Gareth’s famine allegations) and also by London Intelligentsia.

Page 80: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1933-34, The ‘Wilderness’ Year

• Snubbed by Lloyd George (for using his name to give credence by association to Gareth’s famine allegations) and also by London Intelligentsia.

• 1933-34 - Worked as local reporter for Cardiff Western Mail, initially on stories relating to Welsh traditional arts & crafts, but later interviewing Irish Prime Minister, de Valera.

Page 81: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1933-34, The ‘Wilderness’ Year• June 1934 – Meets US

Press Baron, Randolph Hearst at his Welsh Castle, St. Donats, Cardiff – invited to meet again in St. Simeon, California.

• January 1st 1935 – Personally commissioned to repeat 1933 famine observations for Hearst; given carte blanche to write some of the most vitriolic attacks on the Stalinist regime whilst being equally heart-rending.

Page 82: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

12, 13, 14th January 1935,New York American, Los Angles Examiner & Other Hearst Papers

Click HERE for link to articles

Page 83: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – February – The Thomas Walker Affair

Five articles published in American Hearst Press commencing 18 February 1935 relating journalist ‘Thomas Walker’s’ observations of a continuing 1934 Ukrainian famine & illustrated with secretly taken photographs from his own camera.

Page 84: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – February – The Thomas Walker Affair

Page 85: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

• Marxist, Louis Fischer in a published ‘open’ letter to Hearst in left-wing mag’, The Nation, showed that:– Walker’s photos were from different seasons.– Some photos from 1921 famine.– Thomas Walker according to Soviet-supplied records

to Fischer, could never have visited Ukraine.

Page 86: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

• Marxist, Louis Fischer in a published ‘open’ letter to Hearst in left-wing mag’, The Nation, showed that:– Walker’s photos were from different seasons.– Some photos from 1921 famine.– Thomas Walker according to Soviet-supplied records

to Fischer, could never have visited Ukraine.– Not only were all his photos & articles bogus… Even

Walker, himself turned out to be a fake! But whose fake was he? Hearst’s or Stalin’s?

Page 87: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

– In Fisher’s Hearst Letter’s Postscript: “P.S. Would the Hearst press oblige with a photo of Mr Thomas Walker, and with facsimiles of his US passport and of the Soviet visa stamped upon it?”

British PRO Records of Deportees for June 1935 shows…

Page 88: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

Passport Fraud Charged’, New York Times, July 13, 1935 ‘Indicted Writer Also Accused as Escaped Convict’...

“Robert Green, a writer of newspaper articles describing famine conditions in the Ukraine, was indicted yesterday …on the charge that he had made false statements obtaining a passport. George Pfann, Attorney, alleged that Green, who wrote under the pen name, Thomas Walker, was a fugitive from Colorado prison where he escaped in 1921 while serving a sentence for forgery…”

Page 89: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

1. How did Fisher know Walker was travelling on a false passport, three months before his London arrest? Was he informed by the Soviets along with Walker's ‘supposed’ 1934 USSR travel dates? And, who tipped off the British authorities?

Page 90: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

1. How did Fisher know Walker was travelling on a false passport, three months before his London arrest? Was he informed by the Soviets along with Walker's ‘supposed’ 1934 USSR travel dates? And, who tipped off the British authorities?

2. The American Daily Worker wrote; “Evidence at trial revealed he [Walker] had made a previous visit to the Soviet Union in 1930, under the name Thomas J. Burke” and was “expelled for attempting to smuggle out a ‘whiteguard’ out of the country”. Yet Walker, according to Soviet supplied information travelled again to the USSR in Autumn 1934, albeit under another name, but surely a risky undertaking – unless he was perhaps, recruited from a Soviet Gulag?

Page 91: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

• Fischer’s letter combined with Walker’s subsequent (re)arrest effectively for half a century …

– Destroyed the credibility of the Worldwide ‘Conservative’ press’ allegations of any Soviet famine in the 1930s.

Page 92: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 13th March – Louis Fischer & The Thomas Walker Affair

• Fischer’s letter combined with Walker’s subsequent (re)arrest effectively for half a century …

– Destroyed the complete credibility of the Worldwide ‘Conservative’ press’ allegations of any Soviet famine in the 1930s.

– Furthermore, in 1933, when Gareth claimed millions were dying, Fischer then scoffed: “Who counted them? How could anyone march through a country count a million people?”

– But in 1935, without ever mentioning Gareth’s name or even attacking his 1935 articles directly – Gareth’s eyewitness observations of 1933 were not only tarnished by the same brush as Walker’s, but were completely forgotten for nearly 70 years.

Page 93: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Gareth Investigates the Far EastSpring 1935

At the time of Walkers’ articles, Gareth was effectively ‘incommunicado’ having embarked on fact-finding mission of the Far East.

After interviewing the Japanese Minister of War in Tokyo, he decided to visit Inner Mongolia to investigate the Military Expansionism of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo across Northern China…

Page 94: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Gareth Investigates the Far EastGerman Company, Wostwag of Kalgan in North China, kindly supplied vehicle for to visit Prince Teh Wang – independent leader of the Mongols, plus an extended trip into Inner Mongolia to witness the Japanese territorial expansion

Page 95: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 28th July – Gareth Kidnapped in Northern China by Bandits

• Invited on trip by German Journalist, Dr Herbert Mueller.• Gareth assured by Mueller; “Absolutely Safe, No Bandits”.• After kidnapping, Mueller unusually released after two

days as captive, and – gave the only account of the episode, claiming the

Japanese instigated the kidnap by putting them on the wrong road.

Page 96: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – 28th July – Gareth Kidnapped in Northern China by Bandits

• Invited on trip by German Journalist, Dr Herbert Mueller.• Gareth assured by Mueller; “Absolutely Safe, No Bandits”.• After kidnapping, Mueller unusually released after two

days as captive, and – gave the only account of the episode, claiming the

Japanese instigated the kidnap by putting them on the wrong road.

• Ransom later obdurately rejected by bandits …

• Gareth was tragically murdered after two weeks on very

eve of his 30th birthday -12 Aug 1935 …

Page 97: The  Gareth Jones Diaries
Page 98: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – Sept / Oct - Immediate Aftermath

• London publication in The Week by Marxist, Claud Cockburn, claimed that Dr. Mueller was released because of (non-existent) secret Japanese-Nazi Pact.

• Foreign Office concluded after 500-page report; ‘No Foundation Whatsoever’ of Japanese Involvement.

• Ultimately Gareth’s murder put down to the act of a miscreant Chinese bandit’s bullet…

Page 99: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

1935 – Sept / Oct - Immediate Aftermath

• London publication in The Week by Marxist, Claud Cockburn, claimed that Dr. Mueller was released because of (non-existent) secret Japanese-Nazi Pact.

• Foreign Office concluded after 500-page report; ‘No Foundation Whatsoever’ of Japanese Involvement.

• Ultimately Gareth’s murder put down to the act of a miscreant Chinese bandit’s bullet…

• Not a single mention of Gareth’s Soviet ban or any of his famine reporting in whole report.

• The Soviet Union were never once considered as possibly being culpable despite…

Page 100: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Recently Released M.I.5 Records Reveal:1. Dr Mueller was:

– A known Comitern agent – Secret British dossier on his Communist

activities from 1917 -1951 – Lived in the Soviet Consol at Hankow.

Page 101: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Recently Released M.I.5 Records Reveal:1. Dr Mueller was:

– A known Comitern agent – Secret British dossier on his Communist

activities from 1917 -1951 – Lived in the Soviet Consol at Hankow

2. Adams Purpiss of Wostwag, ‘The King of the Kalgan’, who gave free transport, was:

– Head of a major covert arm of Soviet NKVD in China

– Allegedly, ‘de facto’ bankers and arms dealers to Chinese Communist Party

– Deposited 50% of profits to Moscow & in 1937, $900,000 in NYC, Chase Manhattan.

– According to US Intelligence he was ’one of the shrewdest and cleverest men in the Far East’. 

Page 102: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Adelaide Ferry Marquand (Nee, Hooker)In August 1935, NYC Socialite friend of GJ,

Adelaide Ferry Hooker (brother-in-law to John Rockefeller III), happened to be in China on her way to London via the Trans-Siberian Express, She took a detour to Wostwag at Kalgan & stated to Lloyd George:

Page 103: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Adelaide Ferry Marquand (Nee, Hooker)In August 1935, NYC Socialite friend of GJ,

Adelaide Ferry Hooker (brother-in-law to John Rockefeller III), happened to be in China on her way to London via the Trans-Siberian Express, She took a detour to Wostwag at Kalgan & stated to Lloyd George:

•[She met Mueller a day after his release and who was] ; ‘a kind of silent intelligence man keeping track of what goes on for the German Government’. - Right idea – Unfortunately, Wrong Government!

1941: Adelaide & husband author, J. P. Marquand

Page 104: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Adelaide Ferry Marquand (Nee, Hooker)In August 1935, NYC Socialite friend of GJ,

Adelaide Ferry Hooker (brother-in-law to John Rockefeller III), happened to be in China on her way to London on the Trans-Siberian Express, She took a detour to Wostwag at Kalgan & stated Lloyd George:

•[She met Mueller a day after his release and who was] ; ‘a kind of silent intelligence man keeping track of what goes on for the German Government’. - Right idea – Unfortunately, Wrong Government!

•Of Wostwag she stated it: ‘was really a Russian Company trading with Mongolia’.

•‘This ‘peculiar’ transport company was intending to move out of Kalgan... [as] the Japanese were intending to go into Kalgan in a few weeks time and take over a large portion of territory in Northern China.‘ 1941: Adelaide & husband

author, J. P. Marquand

Page 105: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Mr Moto Solves a Mystery!J. P. Marquand – Pulitzer Prize Winner & author

of Mr Moto visits Wostwag in 1934:

1.Same Inner Mongolian Itinerary as GJ in 1935, visiting Prince Teh-Wang

2.Lent Free Brand New Buick Limo which Teh-Wang greatly admired.

3.Buick eventually given as a present to a grateful Prince to curry favour, as well as free passage of Wostwag’s trade monopoly of a 750-monthly caravan of camel-laden ‘goods’ through his lands from USSR into China

4.‘No such thing a free lunch’! – So, why did ‘shrewd’ Purpiss offer Gareth free transport in 1935 – what was in it for him (& was Gareth, his ‘piece of fresh’)?

Page 106: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Mr Moto Solves a Mystery!In 1938, one year after the ‘Rape of

Nanking’ Marquand wrote of his 1934 visit:“In the town of Kalgan… there dwelt a

man named Adams Purpiss. He was the head of a trading company which operated under a German charter, but which was just as Communist Russian as Mr. Purpiss himself.

It was the only company in the troubled period of 1934 which was allowed by Russia to cross with trading goods into Outer Mongolia…a year back they told me it had gone with the wind and Mr. Adams Purpiss and his German and Russian employees had gone with it.”

Page 107: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

MI5 Cover-up or Cock-up?

• MI5 never passed on their relevant intelligence to F.O. in their enquiry, even though:– Sir Vernon Kell, founder and Director General

of MI5, told US intelligence he knew of Wostwag’s financial link with the Soviet Security Services back in 1929.

Page 108: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

MI5 Cover-up or Cock-up?

• MI5 never passed on their relevant intelligence to F.O. in their enquiry, even though:– Sir Vernon Kell, founder and Director General

of MI5, told US intelligence he knew of Wostwag’s financial link with the Soviet Security Services back in 1929.

– Mueller’s 34-year dossier from 1917 was active at the time in 1935.

If they had, then their conclusions may well have been different…

Page 109: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

J’Accuse… Adams Purpiss•The embarrassment to the Japanese by being publicly

implicated with Gareth’s murder in Mueller’s German articles resulted in effectively no further territorial expansion of their Chinese ‘empire’ until the ‘Rape of Nanking’ in 1937, arguably the start of WWII – allowing Wostwag to continue to ‘operate covertly’, probably supplying weapons to Mao on his ‘Long March’ & trading very profitably without hindrance.

Page 110: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

J’Accuse… Adams Purpiss•The embarrassment to the Japanese by being publicly

implicated with Gareth’s murder in Mueller’s German articles resulted in effectively no further territorial expansion of their Chinese ‘empire’ until the ‘Rape of Nanking’ in 1937, arguably the start of WWII – allowing Wostwag to continue to ‘operate covertly’, probably supplying weapons to Mao on his ‘Long March’ & trading very profitably without hindrance.

•As a likely ‘marked’ enemy of the Soviet State for his Holodomor reporting, liquidation of Gareth by NKVD operatives in Inner Mongolia would certainly not have displeased the Moscow hierarchy. And not least of all, by former Chekist, Foreign Commissar Litvinov, who clearly was incensed by Gareth’s affront to embarrassingly expose the Holodomor, ten days after affording him the privilege of a personal & private interview in Moscow…

Page 111: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Orwell’s Mr Jones – The FarmerDid George Orwell recognise Gareth’s

courage in Animal Farm? •GO wrote: “the human beings were

inventing fresh lies about Animal Farm. Once again it was being put about that all the animals were dying of famine and disease .”

Remember Lyons: ‘Poor Gareth Jones must have been the most surprised human being alive when the facts he so painstakingly garnered from our mouths were snowed under by our denials.”

Page 112: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Orwell’s Mr Jones – The FarmerDid George Orwell recognise Gareth’s

courage in Animal Farm? •GO wrote: “the human beings were

inventing fresh lies about Animal Farm. Once again it was being put about that all the animals were dying of famine and disease .”

Remember Lyons: ‘Poor Gareth Jones must have been the most surprised human being alive when the facts he so painstakingly garnered from our mouths were snowed under by our denials.”

•‘9 [Ukrainian] hens had died of coccidiosis’ c.f. Duranty; ‘No Starvation, but …diseases due to malnutrition’ – GO certainly knew of Gareth & Duranty.

Lyons’s reviewed book was Orwell’s Soviet ‘Bible’ e.g. 2+2=5; Big Brother slogan in ‘1984’

Page 113: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Orwell’s Mr Jones – The FarmerDid George Orwell recognise Gareth’s

courage in Animal Farm? •GO wrote: “the human beings were

inventing fresh lies about Animal Farm. Once again it was being put about that all the animals were dying of famine and disease .”

Remember Lyons: ‘Poor Gareth Jones must have been the most surprised human being alive when the facts he so painstakingly garnered from our mouths were snowed under by our denials.”

•‘9 [Ukrainian] hens had died of coccidiosis’ c.f. Duranty; ‘No Starvation, but …diseases due to malnutrition’ – GO certainly knew of Gareth & Duranty.

Lyons’s reviewed book was Orwell’s Soviet ‘Bible’ e…g 2+2=5; Big Brother slogan in ‘1984’

•But was Gareth portrayed as Orwell’s Mr Jones – The Farmer?

Page 114: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Gareth Jones – A Man Who Knew Too Much

On Friday 16th August, upon hearing of Gareth’s murder, Lloyd George commented in The London Evening Standard:

“I was struck with horror when the news of poor Mr Gareth Jones was conveyed to me. I was uneasy about his fate from the moment I ascertained that when his companion, Dr Herbert Müller, was released he was detained.”

Page 115: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

“That part of the world is a cauldron of conflicting intrigue and one or other interests concerned probably knew that Mr Gareth Jones knew too much of what was going on…”

“He had a passion for finding out what was happening in foreign lands wherever there was trouble, and in pursuit of his investigations he shrank from no risk.”

Gareth Jones – A Man Who Knew Too Much

Page 116: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

“That part of the world is a cauldron of conflicting intrigue and one or other interests concerned probably knew that Mr Gareth Jones knew too much of what was going on…”

“He had a passion for finding out what was happening in foreign lands wherever there was trouble, and in pursuit of his investigations he shrank from no risk.”

“…I had always been afraid that he would take one risk too many. Nothing escaped his observation, and he allowed no obstacle to turn from his course when he thought that there was some fact, which he could obtain. “

“He had the almost unfailing knack of getting at things that mattered.”

Gareth Jones – A Man Who Knew Too Much

Page 117: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

But One Might Wonder…

1. What might have become of Gareth, had he lived? Especially with all his knowledge & his ‘Who’s Who’ of contacts…

Pres. Hoover, White House lawn, 1931.

Page 118: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

But One Might Wonder…

1. What might have become of Gareth, had he lived? Especially with all his knowledge & his ‘Who’s Who’ of contacts…

2. What if the World had Listened to any of his ‘Cassandra-like’ Prophesies of doom (Pearl Harbor, Danzig Corridor, WWI War reparations, Nazi-Soviet pact, Stalinist Purges & Ukrainian famine) & Political Insights. He had the ‘low-down’ on the 3 international powers of ‘evil’ – the Japanese, Nazis & Soviets?Pres. Hoover, White

House lawn, 1931.

Page 119: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Gareth Jones – In Conclusion• Gareth’s diaries probably

represent the only independent Western verification of Stalin’s Ukrainian famine-genocide.

• His Soviet articles were arguably the most accurate reporting of 5-year plan.

Page 120: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Gareth Jones – In Conclusion• Gareth’s diaries probably

represent the only independent Western verification of Stalin’s Ukrainian famine-genocide.

• His Soviet articles were arguably the most accurate reporting of 5-year plan.

• With his ‘mysterious’ murder, an heroic ‘loose cannon’ was almost airbrushed out of history for more than half a century…

• He was indeed a “Man Who Knew Too Much”.

Page 121: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

Ihor Kharchenko, London Ukrainian Ambassador at the unveiling of a Tri-lingual Plaque with Gareth's niece, Siriol, myself, the University Vice Chancellor, Chancellor, Lord Morgan and Prof. Lubomyr Luciuk.

2006 – May 2nd Gareth ‘Recognised’ in Aberystwyth, Wales

Page 122: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

2006 – May 2nd Gareth ‘Recognised’ in Aberystwyth, Wales

•Historical tri-lingual bronze bas relief plaque by Toronto sculptor, Oleh Lesiuk was unveiled at The University of Wales, inscribed: ,

“In Memory of Gareth Richard Vaughn Jones, born 1905, who graduated from the University of Aberystwyth and the University of Cambridge. One of the first journalists to report on the Holodomor, the Great Famine of 1932-33 in the Soviet Ukraine.”

Page 123: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

2006 – May 2nd Gareth ‘Recognised’ in Aberystwyth, Wales

•Historical tri-lingual bronze bas relief plaque by Toronto sculptor, Oleh Lesiuk was unveiled at The University of Wales, inscribed: ,

“In Memory of Gareth Richard Vaughn Jones, born 1905, who graduated from the University of Aberystwyth and the University of Cambridge. One of the first journalists to report on the Holodomor, the Great Famine of 1932-33 in the Soviet Ukraine.”

•With my family’s personal thanks to the whole Canadian Ukrainian community for their generous & combined donations, which made this memorial possible…

Page 124: The  Gareth Jones Diaries

2007 November - Canada

And finally, thank youfor the kind invitation &

opportunity to speak to you today,

about my great uncle, Gareth Richard Vaughn Jones

Nigel Linsan Colley

For further information, books, diaries & Gareth’s articles: www.garethjones.org