Prisoners on the occupied Channel Islands were shot for fun by their Nazi guards during the Second World War, research has found.
On Sundays, around a dozen inmates at Sylt – one of the two camps the Germans ran on occupied Alderney – would be chosen for the horrifying target practice.
They were taken to a nearby light railway and tied to trucks before being shot in different parts of their body until they died, according to testimony uncovered by a British artist.
The research by Piers Secunda, 49, is the latest evidence of atrocities committed by the Nazis during their occupation of the Channel Islands from 1940 to 1945.
Mr Secunda spoke to the daughters of former Sylt inmate Giorgi Zbovorski, who died in 2006.
He recounted to his children how he had been among prisoners who were forced to watch as SS guards shot at fellow inmates.
Ingrid Zbovorski recalled of her father’s experience: ‘They would select 12 or 15 of the prisoners.
‘They were put upside down, bound to the train wagons. The guards then started shooting at random, for their amusement.

Prisoners on the occupied Channel Islands were shot for fun by their Nazi guards during the Second World War , research has found. Above: German officers pose outside Lloyds Bank in St Annes, Alderney

On Sundays, around a dozen inmates at Sylt – one of the two camps the Germans ran on occupied Alderney – would be chosen for the horrifying target practice. Above: The remains of Sylt after it was destroyed by the fleeing Nazis in 1945
‘A bullet in your head or your heart and you were dead. A shot in your arm and in your leg, and you would suffer for hours.’
Mr Secunda’s research features in upcoming documentary The Ghosts of Alderney, which is set to air in the UK later this year.
The Channel Islands were the only part of British territory to be occupied by Adolf Hitler’s forces in the whole of the Second World War.
Slave labourers were forced to work in horrific conditions in four camps on Alderney. As well as Sylt, there was Helgoland, Nordeney and Borkum.
Between 641 and 1,027 people – among them Jews, prisoners of war and some Romanis – are known to have to have died amidst the brutal conditions and savage treatment at the hands of SS guards.
A Government report commissioned by Lord Eric Pickles, UK Special Envoy on Post Holocaust Issues, detailed how, ‘beatings and torture were recalled by survivors and dead bodies were often to be found in the barracks’ at Sylt.
Mr Secunda, whose grandfather fought in the Second World War, spent five years researching the lives of slave labourers sent to Alderney, including speaking with descendants of victims and survivors.
He was then approached by production company Wild Dog to make the Ghosts of Alderney film.

Otto Hogelow, the sadistic commander of the SS guards on Alderney, ‘incentivised’ his subordinates to shoot prisoners

Sylt inmate Giorgi Zbovorski told his daughters how prisoners were shot at

A bunker on Alderney, likely built by slave labour from Sylt and the other camps. They were starved, beaten and tortured by the occupying Nazis and forced to toil away erecting part of Hitler’s ‘Atlantic Wall’
‘The findings of the film add another layer of information to our understanding of what happened on Alderney and they confirm yet again the seriousness of the crimes committed there by Germans who were not prosecuted by the British,’ he told MailOnline.
Otto Hogelow, the sadistic commander of the SS guards on Alderney, ‘incentivised’ his subordinates to shoot prisoners, Mr Secunda said.
‘I found a copy of Otto Hogelow’s Nazi Party application form.
‘In it, they question the integrity of his purity of blood, his heritage as an Aryan. So he overcompensates to show his loyalty.
‘I believe that incentivising the SS guards to shoot the prisoners by offering them leave was his way of overcompensating.’
Hogelow is also believed to have put glass into the food of prisoners on Alderney.
Zbovorski was taken to Alderney after trying to escape forced labour in Austria.
He was sent to Belgium in 1944 to work on the Nazi V1 rocket project.

German troops march through the main street of Alderney during the occupation
He escaped with a friend after persuading a German soldier not to shoot them if they ran into the forest.
Another guard then duly shot three of the group they were part of.
By the time Belgium was liberated by the Allies, Zbovorski weighed little more than six stone.
Mr Secunda added: ‘People are names on lists until you unfold their history.
‘The purpose of the research is to unfold the personal stories of the prisoners and make them human again.’
After the Germans surrendered Alderney on May 16, 1945, it was another six months before any of the islanders could return due to the heavy fortifications placed around it.
Allied forces found in excess of 30,000 landmines that had to be painstakingly defused and removed in order for residents to return to their homes.