Independent

Revealed: Britain's refusal to extradite 'Nazi war criminals'
By Paul Lashmar
7 January 2001

Britain's hostility to eastern bloc governments meant that for decades it
refused to investigate allegations against probable Nazi war criminals said
to be responsible for mass killings of Jews and Russians.
According to Foreign Office files seen by the Independent on Sunday,
successive British governments dismissed all requests for cooperation from
Russia during the Cold War despite eyewitness accounts of the horrors
perpetrated by British citizens. In 1970, the Soviet Union requested the
extradition of a Bournemouth guesthouse owner called George Chappell over
the extermination of 5000 Jews in the Ukraine during the German occupation.
But documents released under the 30-year rule by the Public Record Office
show that Foreign Office officials dismissed the allegations against
Chappell as propaganda, and turned down similar requests in a peremptory
manner. It failed to instigate any police inquiries despite the fact that
other countries, including Switzerland and Holland, handed over a number of
Nazi war criminals to communist countries.
Born in 1913 in Georgia as Yuri Chapodze, George Chappell was captured by
the Allies and came to Britain in 1947. He anglicised his name and became a
British citizen in 1956.
The Soviet request says that Chappell defected from the Red Army to the
Germans in 1942. According to Soviet claims he joined the notorious
Caucasian Company, a police unit that helped the Germans in killing
civilians. The Soviets said Chappell had served as a squad commander and had
been involved in "mass annihilation".
"According to eyewitnesses Chapodze personally took part in gunning down
2000 people in Jewish ghettoes near the city of Ternapol. He personally shot
at close range a large number of women, children and other prisoners at the
Yanovsky camp on the outskirts of Lvov," the Russian request said. "In
October 1943 Chapodze directed the massacre of 3,000 Jews, and this is a far
from complete list of the many atrocities perpetrated by this zealous
executor of the Nazi policy of genocide."
In a confidential memo, one Foreign Office official wrote: "We would have
little confidence in the ability of the Soviets to carry out a proper
trial."
The British rejected the extradition request. However, there was no move by
the British authorities to establish whether there was any truth in the
allegations against Chappell. A police constable was sent to tell him of the
extradition request and Mr Chappell, then 58, denied the allegations.
The Foreign Office files show that West Germany also wanted to interview
Chappell about an SS sergeant, Walter Kehrer, who ran a mobile gas chamber
used to kill Jews, Russians, prisoners and children identified as mentally
defective.
West Germany said members of the Caucasian Company had helped Kehrer's unit.
A Foreign Official legal adviser wrote to mandarin Sir Thomas Brimelow: "As
far as I am aware we are under no legal obligation to assist the Germans to
track down and punish war criminals although we might be under a moral
obligation to do so."
The Foreign Office papers reveal that Chappell admitted a connection to
Kehrer but again denied atrocities. He continued to live in Britain. The
West Germans tried Kehrer in 1975 and he was convicted.
According to the author Tom Bower, Chappell would have been among 10,000
Ukrainian PoWs captured in Italy who settled in the UK after the Second
World War. He says the British authorities knew that many of the PoWs had
been members of the 14th Waffen SS "Galician" Division, which had committed
many atrocities. Mr Bower said: "It was a terrible scandal which has never
been explained. Unfortunately no one has ever tried to properly remedy the
existence in Britain of these horrendous murderers."
It was not until the War Crimes Act came into force in 1991 that the British
Government instituted full police inquiries into anyone suspected of war
crimes.



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