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Belarus posthumously prosecutes nazi war crimes fugitive we investigated forty years ago

This is an extended version of an article first published by Searchlight on 6 March 2026

The Supreme Court of Belarus has announced that it will begin criminal proceedings against Antanas Gecevičius, better known in Scotland as Antanas Gecas, for genocide. The case is scheduled to open on 18 March. The defendant has been dead for 25 years.

For anyone who followed Searchlight’s investigations in the late 1980s into Nazi war criminals sheltering in Britain, the announcement will ring bells. It certainly did for me.

Suspect war criminal

I was involved when Searchlight first identified Gecas as a war crimes suspect living in Newington, Edinburgh, in December 1986.

Earlie that year, I had been given – and I’m not at all sure who by – a faxed press release from one of the Soviet bloc news outlets, probably Izvestia, claiming that a nazi war criminal, Antanas (Anton) Gecas, previously known as Gecevicius, had settled in the UK and was now living somewhere in Scotland.

I was at the time working for an independent television production company, and showed the fax to my producers but, for various reasons, they were not inclined to pursue it.

I then sent it to Graeme Atkinson, who was covering international stories for Searchlight at the time, and he filed it away.

List of war criminals

In November 1986, working at that time in Glasgow, Graeme heard on the news that the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC), based in Los Angeles, had given the British government a list of 17 names of individuals accused of war crimes, who had found refuge in the UK.

Graeme remembered the fax. He had it dug out from his files at home and sent up to him, and he then took it to the Scottish Daily Record.

The paper investigated the claim and, shortly afterwards, ran a story about the SWC dossier, which did not name Gecas but, with our document as its source, stated that one of the 17 accused was living in Edinburgh.

Daily Record reports unnamed war criminal living in Edinburgh

This in turn aroused the curiosity of a reporter from Scottish TV News: Bob Tomlinson produced The Daily Record article at the STV News daily editorial conference the following morning and was given the go-ahead to look into the story further.

A few days later, STV ran a report naming Gecas, a Lithuanian exile living in Newington, Edinburgh, whose neighbours had no clue that they had an alleged war criminal in their midst.

I wrote the follow-up article in the December issue of the magazine.

What followed was one of the most sustained and consequential pieces of investigative journalism the magazine has ever undertaken.

Mass executions

Gecas was the commander of the third platoon of the second company of the 12th Lithuanian Police Auxiliary Battalion, a unit that participated in mass executions of Jews, partisans and communists across Lithuania and Belarus during the Nazi occupation.

The killing was concentrated in the final months of 1941, much of it carried out in and around Minsk. Belarus now alleges that Gecevicius personally ordered and participated in the unlawful killing of at least 6,012 people, among them 31 children and numerous elderly victims.

Antanas Gecas
Antanas Gecas

His unit is believed to have been responsible for between 32,000 and 42,000 deaths in total.

Evaded capture

When the Red Army drove out the Nazi occupiers, Gecevičius fled westward with the retreating forces, changed his name, evaded Soviet capture, and eventually settled in Edinburgh in the early 1950s.

He worked as a mining engineer and ran a bed and breakfast. His neighbours had no idea.

Determined investigation

Searchlight’s exposure of Gecas’s crimes was not a lucky tip-off. It was the product of years of determined investigation.

In the summer of 1987, editor Gerry Gable and Sonia Gable spent ten days in the Soviet Union, the first British journalists to do so specifically to investigate war crimes, gathering testimony from survivors, prosecutors and witnesses in Moscow, Minsk, Vilnius and Riga.

Searchlight on Antanas Gecas
Searchlight publishes evidence gathered in the Soviet Union

The August 1987 issue of the magazine carried the results under the front-page headline “Mass Killer!”, with Gecas’s photograph and eyewitness accounts placing him at massacre sites.

Antanas Gecas accusations from Searchlight 1987
Eye witness accounts of Gecas’s involvement in mass killings

That investigation fed directly into a national campaign, launched in October 1987 alongside the Union of Jewish Students and backed by trade unions, which lobbied Parliament and ultimately contributed to the passage of the War Crimes Act 1991, legislation enabling prosecutions for wartime atrocities committed abroad by people now living in Britain.

You can read a full account of Searchlight’s war crimes campaign here.

Despite a civil court finding in 1992 by Lord Milligan, sitting in the Court of Session, that Gecas had “committed war crimes”, criminal proceedings were agonisingly slow.

A warrant for his arrest was not issued until 2001. By then, Gecas had suffered two strokes.

Executions in Byelorussia in 1942
Executions in Byelorussia in 1942

The Scottish Executive, widely criticised at the time, declined to execute the warrant on medical grounds.

Gecas died at Liberton Hospital in Edinburgh just days later, aged 85, and without ever facing a criminal court.

The failure provoked outrage. Efraim Zuroff of the Simon Wiesenthal Center said that men who served as officers in the worst Nazi collaborator murder squads in Eastern Europe did not deserve to die unprosecuted in their beds.

Nazi death squads at work in Minsk

Others pointed to the case of Feodor Fedorenko, a senior guard at the Treblinka death camp who was stripped of US citizenship, deported and executed in the Soviet Union in 1987, proof that political will had been the missing ingredient in Scotland.

Posthumous justice?

Belarus has pursued a series of such cases in recent years, and the criminal case against Gecečičius, running to 17 volumes and involving eight witnesses, is clearly a serious legal undertaking. A conviction would at least establish a formal historical record.

For Searchlight, the Belarus announcement is a grim reminder of what was lost through delay and political inertia. We identified Antanas Gecas nearly forty years ago. Evidence was assembled. A campaign was run. Parliament eventually acted.

And still he died in his bed, in Edinburgh, without ever being called to account in a criminal court.

The victims of his platoon, thousands of them murdered in the forests and streets of Minsk, deserved better than that.



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About Me

I’ve been an active anti-fascist since 1974, working for Searchlight magazine from 1975 till 1989. From 1983 till 1989 I was its editor and co-wrote ‘The Other Face of Terror’, with Ray Hill, the celebrated Searchlight infiltrator into the European neo-Nazi movement. After that, and for the next 20 years, I worked as an investigative journalist with ITV’s World in Action and the BBC’s Panorama. I blog about the history and practice of anti-fascism, especially in the UK.

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