Václav Jelínek
Václav Jelínek | |
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Born | 23 August 1944 |
Other names | Erwin van Haarlem |
Occupation |
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Václav Jelínek (born August 23, 1944) was a Cold War era Czechoslovak spy, who worked in London under the assumed identity of Erwin van Haarlem.[1]
Jelínek was born on 23 August 1944 in Modřany near Prague (now part of the city).[1]
The real Erwin van Haarlem was born on 22 August 1944, the son of Johanna van Haarlem, a woman of Dutch and Jewish ancestry who had been raped by Gregor Kulig, a Polish soldier and Nazi with whom she had been fraternising.[1] Soon after Erwin's birth, by which time Kulig had already been killed in action,[2] he was given up for adoption in Holešovice, Prague.[1] He was later listed in the Netherlands as a missing person.[1]
After compulsory national service, Jelínek became a sergeant, working for the Ministry of the Interior.[2] He was recruited by the Czechoslovak secret police, the Státní bezpečnost (StB). In 1967 Václav Jelínek was transferred from the V. Directorate (Protection of State and Government Officials) to the I. Directorate of the Security Corps. Shortly afterwards, his special training to become a member of the illegal intelligence started. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.[2]
He adopted van Haarlem's identity and moved to London in June 1975, using a genuine Dutch passport, illicitly obtained in van Haarlem's name.[1] He obtained work at the Hilton Hotel restaurant on Park Lane,[1] and began spying on the United Kingdom and United States, for the StB and for the KGB, their equivalent in the Soviet Union.[1][2] His handler was Deputy Colonel .[2] Jelínek was decorated by the KGB on 25 March 1986.[2] Although he posed as a Dutch national, he never lived in the Netherlands.
When Johanna van Haarlem contacted him, in 1977, believing him to be her real son, he was ordered to play along, in order not to blow his cover, and did so, even going so far as to visit her family in Holland.[1] As a result of this deception, she was not reunited with her real son until February 1992.[2]
Eventually, Jelínek tired of working as a waiter, and, with funding from the StB, bought a flat at Silver Birch Close[3] in Friern Barnet, North London and set up as an art dealer.[2] He was eventually arrested in the flat on 22 April 1988, while in the process of receiving coded messages by radio.[2] His trial for espionage at London's Old Bailey opened on 6 February 1989 and was the first trial of a spy in the United Kingdom since 1961.[2] A Metropolitan Police officer said he was "probably the first person to be tried at the Old Bailey under an alias".[2] Among those to testify against him was Stella Rimington, using the alias "Miss J".[2] The jury returned a guilty verdict after just 45 minutes deliberation, and on 3 March 1989 he was sentenced to ten years imprisonment.[2] He was subsequently held at HM Prison Parkhurst.[1] While he was in Parkhurst, the 1989 Velvet Revolution saw the overthrow of communism in Czechoslovakia. On 1 January 1993, Czechoslovakia peacefully dissolved, with its constituent states becoming the independent states of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Following an unsuccessful escape attempt and a period on hunger strike, as well as lobbying on his behalf by Czech diplomats, Jelínek was freed on 5 April 1993 and deported to the Czech Republic.[2][4]
In 2006, VPRO, a radio station in the Netherlands, ran a two-part programme about van Haarlem, called "Het Spoor Terug" (The trail back).[4] His memoirs, written up by were published in Czech in 2010, under the title Český špion Erwin van Haarlem.[2]
As of 2016, Jelínek was living in Prague.[1]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k "The spy with no name". BBC Online. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Maysh, Jeff (2017). The Spy With No Name. Kindle Singles. Amazon.
- ^ 51°36′29″N 0°08′59″W / 51.6080°N 0.1497°W
- ^ Jump up to: a b Mason, Simon. "Czech Mate". Retrieved 4 January 2017.
Further reading[]
- (2010). Český špion Erwin van Haarlem (in Czech).
- 1944 births
- Living people
- Czechoslovak people imprisoned abroad
- People of the StB
- People convicted of spying for Czechoslovakia
- KGB
- Czech people of Polish descent
- People from Prague
- Art dealers from London
- Czechoslovak expatriates in the United Kingdom