BY CLAUDIA JOSEPH (Daily Mail Online)
London, TAG – A BBC bodyguard has confessed to burning the body of a baby on a funeral pyre made of rubbish after the 2004 tsunami – because he considered it a threat to the health of his reporting team.
He
spent ten years accompanying journalists to war zones and scenes of natural
disaster, working with reporters including John Simpson and Nicholas Witchell.
He was with Simpson, in Iraq in 2003, when their vehicle was blown up and their
translator killed.
London, TAG – A BBC bodyguard has confessed to burning the body of a baby on a funeral pyre made of rubbish after the 2004 tsunami – because he considered it a threat to the health of his reporting team.
Craig
Summers, 52, discovered the body outside the house in Banda Aceh, the capital of Indonesia's Aceh province,
where he was staying with journalist Ben Brown and his production team as they
covered the aftermath of the disaster.
But
instead of reporting it to the local authorities, he burned the body of the boy
and swore two other witnesses, including BBC producer Peter Leng, to secrecy.
There is no suggestion that Mr Brown knew about the incident.
Writing
in his new book 'Bodyguard: My Life On The Frontline', Summers compared the body
to an obstacle such as a ‘blocked toilet’.
‘I
pride myself in my work,’ writes Summers, now head of security at Sky TV. ‘Nobody
got sick on that trip. Nobody even came close to diarrhoea and I knew that I
had done my job keeping everyone else healthy. I ran a tight ship ensuring
everyone always washed their hands with wet wipes.
‘The
baby was an obstacle to their health; the next day it would be a blocked
toilet. I hadn’t known it was coming but I had to deal with it and I would do
the same again.’
The
revelation comes four months after the BBC’s Head of Newsgathering, Fran
Unsworth, and Head of Safety, ex-Army officer Paul Greeves, tried to persuade
Summers not to publish the biography.
According
to the bodyguard, they summoned him to a meeting in January after he sent them
a draft copy of the manuscript, and asked him to abandon the project.
It
is not known what they objected to within the book – although the
confession does not paint the Corporation in a good light.
Summers,
a former commando, served with British Forces in the Falklands and Balkans
before being appointed the Corporation’s safety and security adviser in 2001,
working with the High Risk Team – which ‘provides advice to programme-makers
deploying to hostile or dangerous environments’.
![]() |
Craig Summers - (PHOTO - DailyMail) |
It
was also his brief to look after celebrities – including, on occasion, Sir
Ranulph Fiennes, Gary Lineker and Matthew Pinsent. Summers, who also carried
out undercover operations for the BBC, left the Corporation last July, after
accepting redundancy, and now works as Sky’s Broadcast Security Operations
Manager.
It
was on January 7, 2005, 12 days after the tsunami, when he woke at dawn to find
the body of the baby boy, aged between one and two, with matted black hair and
closed eyes, lying on the doorstep.
‘There
had to be a reason for this,’ he writes in his book. ‘This wasn’t random or
down to chance – someone had specifically left this baby at what they
knew to be the BBC house.’
Yet
instead of informing anybody in the house, or contacting the local authorities,
Summers took matters into his own hands. ‘I picked it up with my bare hands and
looked around,’ he added.
‘Nobody
was watching. I walked over to the rubbish, which night after night would pile
high in the streets waiting for the authorities to burn the next day by the
side of the roads to stave off the threat of rats. Removing some cardboard from
the tip, I covered the baby with it.
‘I
heard a voice say, “What’s that Craig?” It was Bob, the Australian paramedic
who was staying next door to us. I walked towards him. He didn’t need me to
answer. “What are you going to do?” he asked.
‘My
response was instant and came from the mouth of a soldier in the zone and on
autopilot. My sole priority was to protect the BBC crew from infection.
‘ “I’m
going to burn it,” I answered. “That’s the best thing to do.” ’
Bob
went to get some petrol from a jerrycan as Summers laid the baby on a box in
the centre of the rubbish. The BBC bodyguard then soaked the body in petrol and
set fire to it. When the flames burned down ten minutes later, the two men
bagged up the smouldering rubbish.
‘I
didn’t look to see the remains of the baby,’ Summers writes, ‘both our heads
were looking down while shovelling.
‘Nothing
was said. We just got on with it. We may have left a skull on the floor – I can’t
recall. I just wanted it done.’
The
incident was witnessed by BBC producer Peter Leng, who was standing in the
doorway of the house used by the Corporation’s staff.
‘I
had no choice but to come clean,’ Summers continued. ‘I told him we had to keep
this to ourselves – I didn’t want anyone else to find out. “I wondered what all
the flies were,” he replied. “How do you feel about it?”
‘ “It’s a
sad situation but I am surprised someone has dumped it on our doorstep,” I
answered bluntly. Only years later did Peter confess that he had told a couple
of people – he also said he was grateful and couldn’t have done the same thing.’
Summers
remains convinced that he did the right thing that day.
Justifying
his behavior, he writes: ‘I was working and this was the job I had to do. If
they were still alive, I couldn’t give the parents that closure because there
were no clues on the baby. I didn’t know how it got here but I felt sure it was
orphaned and deliberately dumped. I couldn’t change its fate. I did what I had
to do. There were no alternatives but to cremate the baby.
‘It
was the most humane thing to do before it became riddled with maggots and was
left to rot in the street. I couldn’t put a sign up outside the house saying: “One
ex-baby here – please knock.’’
‘If
the parents hadn’t died, why would it be dumped?’
Last
night Summers told The Mail on Sunday: ‘At the time we felt it was the easiest
and most humane thing to do. There were a quarter of a million dead people
there and the majority were being dumped in open pits.
‘The
baby was completely unidentifiable – it was infested with maggots and there
were no features on it at all.’
A
BBC spokeswoman said last night: ‘It’s his account, which he has put into
context.
‘From
our point of view, we don’t have anything to say. We don’t discuss private
conversations but managers sometimes talk to staff, or former staff, who have
written books about the BBC – particularly if there are legal or safety issues.’
Last
night Peter Leng did not wish to comment and Ben Brown did not respond to calls.[]
UPDATE: BBC Bodyguard Burned Aceh Tsunami Baby's Body
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
June 04, 2012
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