Toos Faber-Lord



Toos Faber-Lord ( Batavia ( Dutch East Indies ), 23 February1929 ) is a Dutch journalist and former justice officer who became known nationally in late 1975 in the last office at the train hijacking in Wijster .

With the invasion of the Japanese in the Dutch East Indies her father died and shortly after that she was with her ​​mother interned, first in a Japanese POW camp near Bandung and later in Central Java. After the Japanese surrender, she was repatriated to the Netherlands with her ​​mother after she pedagogical reasons to Switzerland where she went to a Dutch school in a short time school diploma shrugged. Then she went on to study law at the University of Leiden . After she graduated, she went there in 1951 as a legal editor working at the former Hague newspaperThe Fatherland . During that time she learned the police inspector William Faber know who briefed the press on the Hague headquarters on news concerning crimes and similar topics. Willem Faber, who later became judge and brought to chair the Board of Appeal and the Tribunal in The Hague, she later married. In 1972, when the Fatherland did it getting worse, she moved to theDepartment of Justice where she was holding. engaged in education End of 1975, she was known in the Netherlands as the justice officer at the train hijacking by South Moluccan youths in the Drenthe Wijster . Shortly thereafter she became deputy head of the information department and around 1984 she was promoted to head of that department. In 1990 she took early retirement.

End of 1977 it seemed that they are in the Cabinet Van Agt I would be appointed to the Ministry of Defence Secretary, but that fell through. eventually

Around September 1981 began the NIS on the TV with the Sunday afternoon program Capitol which they then together with Joop van Tijn and Herman Wigbold was by turns the presenter. After just a few months she stopped doing.