13th November 2023
Published for the first time online A short acount of the Life and Murder of Gareth Jones, the first ever academic study of of the now famous Welsh investigative journalist. The dissertation was presented by Philip Colley as part of a Newcastle University BA Hons degree in 1987. HERE
15th October 2023
Published for the first time online two letters by Baron von Plessen who, along with Dr Herber Müller, accompanied Gareth on his fateful last journey. One of the letters talks of the warning to Gareth by the British Military Attaché to "on no account go to the border with Jehol as it was infested by bandits". HERE
12th October 2023
Posted on this website the only known English translation of Adolf Ehrt's introduction to his June 1933 compilation of German colonist 'Hungerbriefe' help letters titled Brothers in Need: Documents of the famine among the German comrades in Russia. Some of the letters were used as evidence for Gareth's articles. HERE
3rd October 2023
A plaque commemorating Gareth was unveiled at the Vernadsky National Library in Kyiv today. The tri-lingual plaque funded by diaspora Ukrainians is similar to those already placed in Aberystwyth and Barry. It was noted by family members that the event was also used to promote a book co-authored by Volodymyr Viatrovych, someone accused by Jewish groups of "running a public awareness campaign whitewashing the participation of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), a Ukrainian nationalist militia, in the Holocaust". At the unveiling Viatrovych claimed his work helping to air-brush out of history the role of the Organistaion of Ukrainian Nationalists in aiding Nazi Germany was done "in the spirit of Gareth Jones". In response to the event Gareth's great nephew Philip Colley stated, “while we welcome anything that commemorates Gareth’s work in giving a voice to all those Russian, Ukrainian and Kazakh victims of Stalin’s crimes, it is nonetheless distressing for the family to see our relative, a journalist known for his great integrity and opposition to nationalism, being co-opted by Ukrainian ultra-nationalists in the cause of Holocaust revisionism.” HERE
2nd October 2023
Courtesy of the Liverpool Worldwide Museum a selection of pages from the diaries of Sir Charles Bell, the British Political Officer for Bhutan, Sikkim and Tibet, with references to his meeting with Gareth in Inner Mongolia in 1935 are presented HERE
12th August 2023
'Barry honours Welsh journalist Gareth Jones who covered Ukraine famine'. Article in the Barry and District News. HERE
22nd July 2023
Gareth Jones plaque arrives in Kiev, scheduled to be unveiled on 4th October 2023. HERE
26th May 2023
The Russian Embassy in London attacks the previous day's motion in Parliament as being 'politicized'. "A large scale famine broke out", it declares, without going into any detail as to how, but says the famine affected "not only Ukraine but also Belarus, the North Caucasus, the Volga Region, the Southern Urals, Western Siberia and Kazakhstan". They also accuse Kiev of trying to 'privatize' what they term a "collective Soviet tragedy". HERE
25th May 2023
Gareth's truncated words are again used, this time twice, in a House of Commons debate on whether to recognise the Holodomor as genocide. Firstly, Pauline Latham (Con) in her opening statement quotes Gareth,“I walked…through villages and 12 collective farms. Everywhere was the cry, ‘There is no bread; we are dying’” but omits to mention the accompanying sentence, "This cry came from every part of Russia, from the Volga, Siberia, White Russia [Belarus], the North Caucasus, and Central Asia." Later in the debate (3.34pm) Stephen Doughty again uses the same quote and again omits to mention its second part. Minister of State Leo Docherty reaffirmed the Government's "long-standing policy... that any judgment on whether genocide has occurred is a matter for a competent court, after consideration of all the evidence available, rather than Governments or non-judicial bodies. This approach ensures that genocide determinations are above politics, above lobbying and above individual, political or national interests." The motion in favour of Parliament, as opposed to the Government, recognising the Holodomor as genocide is passed. HERE
20th May 2023
In a cross border raid today Ukrainian militia attacked the Russian village of Krasny Khutor where Gareth spent the first night of his famous hike through the Soviet countryside on 11the March 1933. It was in this village he saw the first evidence of the famine then raging in the form of a Russian child with "belly swollen". Other Russian peasants around complained that there was "no bread" and one woman said to him: "We are looking forward to death." HERE
7th March 2023
Gareth's truncated words are used in a House of Commons debate Ukrainian Holodomor and the War in Ukraine by Stephen Doughty (Labour Co-op): “I walked along through villages and 12 collective farms. Everywhere was the cry, “There is no bread. We are dying.” The full quote as given at Gareth's March 29th Press Conference in Berlin and reported by H.R. Knickerbocker of the New York Evening Post was, “I walked along through villages and 12 collective farms. Everywhere was the cry, “There is no bread. We are dying." This cry came from every part of Russia, from the Volga, Siberia, White Russia [Belarus], the North Caucasus, and Central Asia." Whilst recognising "the Holodomor as an appalling tragedy", Minister of State Leo Docherty reiterated that it was the "long-standing policy of the Government that any judgment on whether genocide has occurred is a matter for a competent court, rather than Governments or non-judicial bodies". HERE
6th March 2023
Reporting Ukraine 90 years ago. Article by Richard Sambrook appears in the Conversation. HERE
3rd March 2023
Hitler, Stalin, and Mr Jones – the story of a true Welsh hero. Article by Christopher Evans appears in Naton.Cymru HERE
3rd March 2023
Gareth Jones has been honoured at an event held at the Garden of the Righteous in Milan on Friday 3rd 2023.
A plaque dedicated to his ‘exemplary action’ was unveiled and a memorial scroll received on Gareth’s behalf by his great nephew Philip Colley. For Philip’s speech and further details please see HERE
30th January
Seeds of Hunger – Ukraine 1933 by Guillaume Ribo wins at FIPADOC documentary prize HERE