The urgent phone call comes from behind the barbed wire.
'This is Ayalon prison,' says one of the guards urgently. 'Listen, he hanged himself, we need an ambulance.'
Prisoner X, just 34 years old, was slumped in a small bathroom, separated from his cell by a transparent door. Kept in one of the most technologically sophisticated solitary jail cells, at the behest of one of the world's most feared intelligence agencies, it is not easy to kill yourself. But Ben Zygier managed to do just that.
Did he work for Mossad? Was he also working for ASIO? Was he involved in the supply of false passports? Was he a whistle blower or double agent, or simply a young man way out of his depth?
In Prisoner X Rafael Epstein uncovers the intriguing story of a young Australian swept up in international intelligence.
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"An engrossing attempt to unravel the enigma of Ben Zygier, a young Melbourne man turned Israeli spy." --Leigh Sales, host, ABC TV's current affairs program "7.30"
An engrossing attempt to unravel the enigma of Ben Zygier, a young Melbourne man turned Israeli spy. Leigh Sales, host, ABC TV s current affairs program "7.30""
Rafael Epstein has won two Walkleys for his investigative reporting at ABC Radio. He has worked in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Timor, Indonesia, Europe and the Middle East covering national elections in the UK and Australia, East Timor's vote for independence in 1999, the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami, the 2005 London bombings, and the arrest of several high profile war crimes suspects in the Balkans.
He won his first Walkley Award with The Age's Nick McKenzie for their reporting on the links between police and Melbourne's underworld wars. Rafael won his second Walkley award for his coverage on the failings of the Australian Federal Police when they arrested Mohamed Haneef, the Indian born doctor charged over his connections to the failed bombings in London and Glasgow in 2007.
He has also worked at the Investigative Unit at The Age newspaper in Melbourne, focusing on politics as well as Australia's special forces and their role in Afghanistan.
He knew Ben Zygier when they were both involved in Jewish youth movements in Melbourne.
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