logo
Dark secrets of ‘UK's Guantanamo Bay' where murderers are punished with trips to ‘The Box' & no inmate has EVER escaped

Dark secrets of ‘UK's Guantanamo Bay' where murderers are punished with trips to ‘The Box' & no inmate has EVER escaped

The Sun24-06-2025
SOME call it the UK's Guantanamo Bay, others know it simply as Hellmarsh.
With a level of security second to none, no prisoner has ever successfully escaped from HMP Belmarsh, but now its most chilling secrets can be revealed - from secret hellhole punishment cells to inmates' brutal games.
9
9
Through accounts of daily routines, brutal fights, gang warfare, drug smuggling and moments of unexpected redemption, my new book uncovers the truth about life inside Hellmarsh.
A former inmate told fellow author Emma French and I: 'HMP Belmarsh is a brutal place, and every movement around the jail is along long internal walkways. Every move you make is monitored.
'It is run by staff who set examples to instill fear into you. They have a saying: 'Treat them as you expect to be treated.'
'If you keep your head down, you will be left alone, but if you are rude then they will target you.
'The Ministry of Justice will of course never admit their prison is run on intimidation with a hard line, but it is.
'To be fair to them, as much as I personally am not a fan of Belmarsh, given the serious nature of some of the offenders' offences, I guess it has to be run in a firm and brutal fashion to keep good order and discipline.'
Belmarsh, in south east London, is the only prison in England and Wales with a 'prison within a prison', otherwise known as the High-Security Unit (HSU).
Surrounded by 20-foot-high concrete walls and monitored by 96 cameras, it's designed to house some of the most dangerous criminals in the country.
While Belmarsh can hold up to 910 men, just 48 can be confined within the HSU at any given time.
The prison also contains a segregation unit and two notorious cells known as The Boxes. These are bleak, windowless isolation rooms with no beds, sinks or toilets.
Over the years, the HSU has held a chilling mix of IRA bombers, KGB spies, al-Qaeda terrorists and even Charles Bronson, whose violent reputation earned him his own private wing.
Yet, despite its Category A prisoners, Belmarsh also functions as a standard prison. Around one in five inmates is a convicted murderer, yet many others serve time for lesser offences.
How do staff balance handling petty criminals alongside serial rapists, terrorists and gang leaders? And what happens when such high-risk individuals are forced to coexist?
As one former Belmarsh inmate put it: 'Over the years, you can be sure that with all the high-profile cases heard at the Central Criminal Court or Woolwich Crown Court, the offenders were detained at HMP Belmarsh.
'Some of whom I have personally met: Mark Dixie (The Sally Anne Bowman case), Steve Wright (The Suffolk Strangler), Stuart Hazell (The Tia Sharp murder in Croydon), Barry George (The Jill Dando case), John Worboys (The Black Cab Rapist).
'Also Wayne Couzens (The Sarah Everard case), Steven Barker (The Baby P case), John Duffy (the 1980s railway killer), Kenny Noye, Ian Huntley (The Soham Murders), and Lea Rusha, Roger Coutts, Stuart Royle, Ermir Hysenaj, and Jetmir Bucpapa, who all pulled the largest cash robbery in UK history – the Securitas robbery in Tonbridge, Kent, in February 2006.'
His list didn't end there, either: ' Terrorists, the London bombers, The Hatton Garden Job crew.
'Many high-profile cases over the years have had the pleasure of experiencing the harsh regime at HMP Belmarsh.'
9
9
'Many were completely messed up'
Former Conservative Cabinet minister Jonathan Aitken served time in Belmarsh after being convicted of perjury and became something of confidante to many lags.
What really struck Jonathan was their vulnerability.
He explained: 'Many were completely messed up. One guy, I found out, should have been released already, but nobody had told him.
'All the time, I felt like I was on the funny farm, yet at the same time, people confided in me.
''Do you think my wife will ever let me back?' or 'How will I ever lift up my head again?'
'I was a middle-class bloke, and there was a lot of agony-aunting. But I did feel I was being of some use.'
A prisoner officer warned the ex MP he was to be moved, saying, 'Aitken, you're going to Beirut.'
Another inmate warned: 'Oh, don't go to Beirut. That's where the real hard men are. If you get on the wrong side of them, they'll crush your balls, mate.'
Aitken added: 'I had no idea what he meant. Eventually, I learned Beirut was just B Wing.
'That night, I heard a ritual called 'doing a quizzy'. Inmates shouted questions across the wing.
"Sometimes they were crude. 'Who'd like to s**g Officer S?'
9
9
'Sometimes they were coded messages. 'Remember to tell the court the car was green.'
'But that night, it was about me. 'What are we gonna do to him?'
'Let's eat his balls!'
'Let's give him a good kicking!'
'It was nasty. They were high on drugs, but it was still terrifying. The threats felt real, and I took them seriously.
'I have never felt more lonely, frightened or vulnerable. I knelt and tried to say a prayer, but I was too scared."
Prison jobs for monsters
9
Some prisoners are allowed to work at Belmarsh. Ex prisoner Mike observed that in his experience, some of the best prison jobs went to the worst people.
He revealed: 'The honour killing. The guy who put his daughter in a suitcase. He made tea for the prison officers at Belmarsh. Some multiple murderers, horrible human beings, get privileges like that.'
He's talking about the case of Mahmod Mahmod, who orchestrated the murder of his own daughter with accomplices including her uncle.
Mike recalled another depraved murderer having a degree of responsibility in Belmarsh, too.
He said: 'The Colindale killer has a funny eye. He had a job giving out milk. He killed a woman on an allotment because he wanted to run the allotment.'
Mike is referring to Rahim Mohammadi, who strangled 80-year-old widow Lea Adri-Soejoko with a lawnmower cable in February 2017 at an allotments plot in London.
I have never felt more lonely, frightened or vulnerable. I knelt and tried to say a prayer, but I was too scared.
Jonathan Aitken
One ex-inmate of several prisons described the exercise yard at Belmarsh as "small and secure, nowhere near the boundary fence.
'No spur (wing) mixes with another spur on exercise. The surrounding fence and wall are huge with razor wire running around the top, CCTV watching your every move.
'If you stop and bend down to pick something up off the floor you are challenged there and then.
'This is even after the exercise yard was previously checked and searched by staff prior to the inmates even going out on the yard.
'I guess a testament to their paranoid security measures. There are posters on the walls throughout the prison warning staff. They state, 'Believe nothing, check everything, keep calm and carry on.''
Former officer Nik said of the meals served up: 'The food was grim. But sometimes we ate it. Some of the curries were actually okay.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Migrant policies ‘creating more barriers to child safety', says charity
Migrant policies ‘creating more barriers to child safety', says charity

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Migrant policies ‘creating more barriers to child safety', says charity

Conditions at the UK-France border are becoming 'more dangerous' for young people, a charity has warned, after it was revealed that at least 15 children died trying to cross the Channel last year. Young children hide under tables when they think they hear the sound of sirens because they are commonly scared of the police, according to organisation Project Play, who raised concerns of teargas and evictions. Advocacy coordinator Kate O'Neill, based in northern France, told the PA news agency there has been a rise in police violence which is disproportionately harming children. She said: 'Ultimately the children we're meeting every day are not safe. 'They're exposed to a level of violence, whether it's they are directly victims of it or the witness. 'We're ultimately at all times putting out fires… the underlying issue is these policies of border securitisation… that are creating more and more barriers to child safety and child protection.' She said there was hope when the Labour Government took office a year ago that there would be some improvement, adding: 'This is not at all what we've seen. 'They continued to make conditions more difficult and more dangerous.' She said: 'The smash-the-gangs narrative is not effective and it's harmful because ultimately the only way to put the gangs out of business is to cut the need for them.' It comes as the grassroots organisation published a report that said at least 15 children died trying to cross the English Channel last year, more than the total of the past four years combined. The charity that offers play services, parental support and safeguarding casework to children aged 0-18 living in sites around Calais and Dunkirk, documented rising violence, trauma and child deaths linked with UK border policies and funding to the French to ramp up enforcement in 2024. In February this year, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper agreed to re-purpose £7 million of cash to French counterparts to bolster enforcement action on the nation's coastline to tackle Channel crossings. 'What we really need to see is some cross-border accountability for the incidents and the fatalities in the Channel,' Ms O'Neill said. The campaigner said one of the main calls as a result of the group's research is for an official source of the number of deaths and information on these deaths to be recorded. Figures for the report came from International Organisation for Migration, Calais Migrant Solidarity and other networks in northern France. 'We don't have the identities of all of them. 'In fact, these deaths are going unrecorded and unreported,' she said. One in five crossing the English Channel between 2018 and 2024 were children, according to Project Play. Meanwhile, Ms O'Neill said tactics for French police to intervene in crossing attempts in shallow waters is already happening despite the changes needed to the rules to allow this having not yet come into force. She said: 'This is not a new tactic… it's something that has been happening for a long time in Calais and surrounding areas. 'My feeling is that this is increasing based on the number of testimonies we're receiving from children and their families recently.' 'It's really dangerous because the children often are in the middle of the boats.' But on Friday, Ms Cooper said intervention in French waters was 'critical'. 'That's one of the big things that has changed, the way in which the boats operate in shallow waters,' she said. 'We have to have the action on those because that's that is where the prevention needs to take place.' Ms Cooper also pressed the case for introducing the new criminal offence of endangering life at sea under the Government's Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, after seeing 'awful cases' of children being crushed to death in the middle of overcrowded boats. Project Play worked with more than 1,000 children in 2024, and believes in the last few weeks there have been a 'very large amount' of children they worked with who were born and went to school in a European country, such as Germany, Denmark and Sweden. Ms O'Neill said families' visas granted five or 10 years ago in other European countries for refuge have since expired and they have not been allowed to stay, which she said is behind the increase in crossings to the UK. She said since Brexit meant the UK left the Dublin regulation, the country is a 'viable option'. The European Union law set out that the first EU country an asylum seeker entered was responsible for processing their claim, and the UK can no longer send asylum seekers back to other member states since leaving the bloc. Ms O'Neill said: 'Most people we're speaking to, that is why they're going. 'They're not going to claim benefits from the UK or to do anything for free, but it's the next nearest safe place they can be. 'This needs to be addressed… as a European-wide issue instead of just a UK-France thing.' A Home Office spokesperson said: 'We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security. 'Through international intelligence sharing under our Border Security Command, enhanced enforcement operations in Northern France and tougher legislation in the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, we are strengthening international partnerships and boosting our ability to identify, disrupt, and dismantle criminal gangs.'

Met Police release footage as more than 1,000 arrests made using live facial recognition technology
Met Police release footage as more than 1,000 arrests made using live facial recognition technology

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Met Police release footage as more than 1,000 arrests made using live facial recognition technology

More than 1,000 criminals, including a paedophile found with a six-year-old girl, have been arrested by the Metropolitan Police using live facial recognition (LFR) cameras. David Cheneler, 73, was among 93 registered sex offenders held by Met officers using the controversial technology since the start of last year. He was discovered with the girl after he was identified by a camera on a police van in Camberwell, south London, in January. Cheneler, from Lewisham, was jailed for two years in May after admitting breaching his sexual harm prevention order by being with a child under the age of 14. The Met said a total of 1,035 arrests have been made using live facial recognition technology - where live footage is recorded of people as they walk past, capturing their faces, which are then compared against a database of wanted offenders. If a match is determined, the system creates an alert which is assessed by an officer, who may decide to speak to the person. They include more than 100 people alleged to have been involved in serious violence against women and girls (VAWG) offences such as strangulation, stalking, domestic abuse, and rape. Image: Adenola Akindutire admitted charges including robbery. Pic: Met Police Adenola Akindutire was stopped during an operation in Stratford and arrested over the machete robbery of a Rolex watch, which left the victim with life-changing injuries after the attack in Hayes, west London. Police said the 22-year-old, who was linked to a similar incident and had been released on bail, was in possession of a false passport and could have evaded arrest if it wasn't for the technology. Akindutire, of no fixed address, admitted charges including robbery, attempted robbery, grievous bodily harm, possession of a false identity document and two counts of possession of a bladed article and faces sentencing at Isleworth Crown Court. Image: Darren Dubarry was stopped on his bike. Pic: Met Police Image: Dubarry was caught with stolen designer clothes. Pic: Met Police Darren Dubarry, 50, was already wanted for theft when he was caught with stolen designer clothing in Dalston, east London, after riding past an LFR camera on his bike. The 50-year-old, from Stratford, east London, was fined after pleading guilty to handling stolen goods. Lindsey Chiswick, the Met's LFR lead, hailed the 1,000 arrest milestone as "a demonstration of how cutting-edge technology can make London safer by removing dangerous offenders from our streets". "Live Facial Recognition is a powerful tool, which is helping us deliver justice for victims, including those who have been subjected to horrendous offences, such as rape and serious assault," she said. "It is not only saving our officers' valuable time but delivering faster, more accurate results to catch criminals - helping us be more efficient than ever before." The Met say "robust safeguards" are in place, which ensure no biometric data is retained from anyone who walks past an LFR camera who isn't wanted by police. Almost 2 million faces scanned But human rights group Liberty is calling for new laws to be introduced to govern how police forces use the technology after Liberty Investigates found almost 1.9 million faces were scanned by the Met between January 2022 and March this year. Read more from Sky News: Leaseholders to get stronger rights, powers and protections PM told to 'use Rayner - people like her' Charlie Whelton, Liberty policy and campaigns officer, said: "We all want to feel safe in our communities, but technology is advancing quickly, and we need to make sure that our laws keep up. "Any tech which has the potential to infringe on our rights in the way scanning and identifying millions of people does needs to have robust safeguards around its use to protect us all from abuse of power as we go about our daily lives. "There is currently no overarching law governing police use of facial recognition in the UK, and we shouldn't leave police forces to come up with these frameworks on their own. "Almost two million faces have been scanned in London before Parliament has even decided what the laws should be. "We need to catch up with other countries, and the law needs to catch up with the use. Parliament must legislate now and ensure that safeguards are in place to protect people's rights where the police use this technology."

Mystery figure terrorises neighbourhood by prowling the streets - dressed as a black cat
Mystery figure terrorises neighbourhood by prowling the streets - dressed as a black cat

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mystery figure terrorises neighbourhood by prowling the streets - dressed as a black cat

A mysterious figure dressed in a catsuit and prowling along paths near Wallasey Beach in the Wirral has terrified locals. The person has caused chaos in the neighbourhood in Merseyside with some residents revealing they had 'never been so scared' after they encountered him. The figure, dressed entirely in a skin-tight black cat suit and mask, has been described as an 'urban jaguar', 'banshee' and a 'gimp' by residents after he was caught meowing and writhing around on the ground. Pictures and videos on social media show the peculiar person prancing along a path and wriggling under fences near a local Harvester pub. In a post on a local Facebook community page, Abbie Gilbert wrote: 'Anyone know who the freak in the cat mask and morph suit is at the coastal park near the harvester? 'Was walking my dog tonight and heard a man making cat noises, shone a torch he was waving his arms at me before crawling up the hill! Never been so scared!' Accompanying pictures showed a shadowy figure walking uphill, snapped in the torch light of Ms Gilbert's phone. One resident told the BBC that she noticed something strange as she walked her dog. Pictures and videos on social media show the peculiar person prancing along a path and wriggling under fences near a local Harvester pub She explained that as soon as she walked away from nearby streetlights, she began to hear growling. Her terrier Mac began barking and she shone her phone torch in to the field where she spotted 'a man in a panther costume', crawling up the hill towards her on all fours. She added: 'I didn't feel scared really, he was just waving his arms and making panther noises. I felt more confused than scared.' One resident, Becky Edwards, commented under the post that it was the same figure her friend had seen a few months ago and posted a picture of the man in a cat suit wriggling around on the floor near a fence. Another local, Adam Crouch, the owner of nearby Northern Kites Kitesurf and Wingfoil School, told the Telegraph that he thought it may simply be someone 'having a laugh'. However Merseyside Police and Crime Commissioner Emily Spurrell encouraged anyone spotting the mysterious figure in a morph suit to report it to the police immediately. While the shadowy figure has sparked concern among some locals, others thought the incident was hilarious and took to Facebook to poke fun at the bizarre incident. Some joked, writing: 'I went through a stage of doing this year's ago but I've now got through it, don't ask MEOW!!!!' and 'Hi, this is my cat. He isn't chipped and is quite skittish, we've been missing him for a few days so please don't approach again. We're hoping he comes back home soon, my wife's boyfriend is worried sick'. Others called it 'the stuff of nightmares' while some asked 'is catting a thing now?'. MailOnline has contacted Merseyside Police for comment. The episode has drawn comparisons with the 'Somerset Gimp' who terrified motorists driving home at night by dressing in a black gimp suit in May 2023 in Bleadon, near Weston-super-Mare. Joshua Hunt, 32, was banned for five years from wearing masks, dressing in all-in-one black outfits at night and 'crawling, wriggling or writhing on the ground' in public after being linked to 25 horrifying incidents. Hunt's victims recalled never being so scared and told the court: 'I have never felt fear like that before, or since and I can only describe the scene as like something you see in a horror movie, I was that scared.' Avon and Somerset Police confirmed that Hunt had previously been arrested on suspicion of causing a public nuisance over a series of other 'gimp' incidents in the Cleeve, Claverham and Yatton areas of the county last year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store