700-Year-Old Murder Mystery of Priest Unveiled by Cambridge Historians

A forthcoming documentary titled Ghosts of Alderney unveils chilling evidence of Nazi atrocities at the Sylt prison camp on Alderney during World War II. The documentary, directed by Piers Secunda, explores accounts indicating that SS guards used prisoners for target practice, shooting them for amusement on weekends, according to eyewitness testimony from Giorgi Zbovorski, a Ukrainian prisoner held there for 18 months.
Zbovorski's daughter, Ingrid, recounts his harrowing experiences, noting that prisoners were bound and shot at random by the guards. Secunda's five-year research highlights a cycle of violence fueled by the head of the SS guards, Otto Hogelow, who incentivized his men to kill inmates by offering them additional leave and provisions for every five prisoners shot.
Historian Gilly Carr from Cambridge University emphasized the need for further investigation into these accounts while acknowledging their significance in understanding the brutal conditions endured by over a thousand slave laborers who likely lost their lives on the island, as per last year's review led by Lord Pickles.